Hi all! Timestamps are available in the description, and subtitles are available. Some fun statistics: the video length is 2 hours 50 minutes, the script length is 27,318 words, contains 742 citations, from 57 sources, and the final render took 6 hours and 45 minutes. In total, all the files amount to 870 GBs of hard drive space. This video has been in the works for the past 6 to 7 months, with my editor/animator (Gigz) deserving a big thank you for all her hard work! I also pulled an all-nighter last night to get it to you on time, so I really do hope you all enjoy it. A big thank you to Gigz, as well as Terri (who made the map and the thumbnail), and another a big THANK YOU to my Patreons and SubscribeStars for making this video possible. For further reading, I highly recommend the series “The Crucible of War” by Barrie Pitt, which is probably the best all-round account of the North African Campaign. The South African “Crisis in the Desert” is another good book, but can be difficult to get a hold of, is biased towards Pienaar, and is a bit out of date. Playfair’s Official British History is also recommended, even if it’s out of date and biased towards Auchinleck. Carver’s “Dilemma’s of the Desert” is a necessary read if you’re interested in the debate about whether Ritchie “went rogue” in this battle or not. Forczyk’s “Desert Armour” is also a decent modern source for this battle and others.
Tell Gigz "Well done". Thanks again for all your hard work. I'm only a little way into it and it's outstanding to say the least. Now, back to the video. Cheers from Tennessee
It's Awesome to see so many people excited for what is essentially a very well prepared and produced independent documentary film. Great work TIK! We are extremely grateful for what you do.
@@TheImperatorKnight I appreciate your hard work here and I really don't understand any hatred towards you, but it takes alsorts . Please keep up the great content and wonderful presentations I like them
Forward Observer: '' Rommel himself just passed my position and was smilling and waving at me, I repeat, Rommel himself is here!'' Officer from 30 Corps: ''There are no enemy forces in your area''.
"I have been wounded. The Germans are treating me. The medic is very polite, his name is Franz. Say hello, Franz." „Hallo!" "We say again, there are no, repeat no, enemy troops near you."
"... a sandstorm bought an end to the fighting, however, the British lost a Grant tank after setting fire to it while attempting to brew some tea" *rule britannia is heard faintly in the distance over the sounds of the sandstorm*
"Oh gosh, the tank is on fire..." "Oh bugger, how did that happen?" "No idea mate, but we should probably escape it." "Nooo, my tea!" The rest of the company: "what a nice opportunity to brew more tea..."
I've known 4 BVs which have been left on and therefore boiled dry and potentially caused a fire destroying the vehicle. Though I was light infantry and none of our own vehicles had BVs. So the proud tradition continues!
The initial battle of Gazala in a nutshell: Recon Brigade: "I see over 50 tanks attacking the south" Command: "No you dont" Recon Brigade: Yes. I do. Command: No. You dont. Recon Brigade: Yes. I do. Command: No. You dont. And then all hell broke loose...
Messervy went on to distinguish himself in Burma as a corps commander in the 14th Army. Under a very capable commander in Bill Slim and without the rivalries and hatreds that abounded in Auchinleck's MEC, Messervy was able to function as a very capable corps commander who played a big role in both the battle of Kohima and the capture of Rangoon. One of the lessons Messervy seems to have learned from his time as 7th AD commander is the importance of combined arms. He insisted that the 14th army should use medium tanks, not just light ones, and had Grant tanks shipped out to India for use in Burma where they proved crucial at Kohima. Ritchie too has a redemption arc. He returned to the UK and was given a division to command there. He did well enough and was given XII Corps to command in the British 2nd Army in NW Europe where he did a very competent job and showed good leadership throughout. In both Messervy's and Ritchie's cases it looks like they were undermined by the command atmosphere and chaos of Auchinleck's MEC. Whilst some of his strategy was sound, he allowed far too much infighting, chaos and confusion amongst his subordinates therefore the defeats and setbacks in North Africa under his command lead me to think he bore the lion's share of the blame because he didn't control his army in the same way that Slim and Montgomery could.
I agree. As much as Messervy and Ritchie made mistakes, the overall situation was not favourable to them due to Auchinleck and Churchill. I don't think any one person can be blamed entirely for Gazala, it was just a whole host of bad decisions that were made during and prior to the battle that contributed to the defeat. That said, it's understandable why certain individuals did receive the blame.
Then again Auchinleck also got booted to India replacing Wavell (again) and as overall commander in India he was, of sorts, Messervy's boss again. And Slim credits Auchinleck massively in his book for giving him the support and means to build 14th Army. I reckon that as TIK has said, it was a combinations of bad decisions, poor tactical and operational doctrine, Churchill breathing down everyone's necks, and the wrong people at the wrong places at the wrong time. Ritchie would be a decent corps commander in NW Europe, but apparently not suited for army command. Peter Principle at work. And Messervy, being an infantry officer of the Indian Army was probably not the most optimal choice to head an armored division in the chaos of 1942. The irony is that Messervy would end up Pakistan's 1st chief of the Pakistani Army. Which meant that when Pakistan and India went to war with each other he would command an army to fight against an army commanded by another British general, as General Lockhart commanded the Indian Army. And both armies were under nominal control of......., drumroll, Auchinleck, then supreme commander of both country's armies.
You're blaming the only competent guy in the theatre for the problems (Churchill and Montgomery shared your views). Auchinlek was from the Indian Army and was constantly undermined by the British Army officers, especially the cavalry and other polo/drinks club types. The record makes it clear he was constantly trying to get them to think much more clearly about how to fight modern war, but they were woefully ill-equipped by temperament and training. Auchinlek had to work with what he had: there were very few capable British armour commanders and much demand for them. The need to work with what he had, and his role as a theatre commander, not 8th Army commander, meant he had to use the good men to keep an eye on the plodders. On top of that, offciers who were fine against Italians or second-rate enemies often struggled with the pace and dynamism of Rommel: when the default British order was always "Charge!!", the Desert Fox just had to deploy his AT guns and flash around a few tanks to draw the British onto them. Which brings us to the British Army itself: Carver says 'we felt like amateurs fighting professionals' and he notes his (cavalry) regiment was just handed tanks of the eve of war and told to get on with it. The British military establishment was not cleaned out after the First World War, and most of the old regimental class system was intact. So they resisted modernisation in the interwar period and eventually saw off Hobart (where was he when needed? In the freaking Home Guard!) and the whole revolution in mobile warfare largely passed them by. Back to polo, while Hitler's men were learning all they could in Spain. The whole beloved 'regimental tradition' inhibited combined arms so much that is was still lacking in Normandy in 1944. From Belgium to Singapore, co-ordinating forces was beyond Britian's generals... especially depressing given that in 1918 they were the best in the world. The infighting and division you speak of- and it was very real- was just an extension of the British Army's culture. Really only Montgomery had the moral authority and will to clean our divisional and even corps commanders: and that moral authority was built on bullshit. You are generous to Messervey and Ritchie. Neither had a comparable challenge after leaving the desert, Messervey had the enormous benefit of serving under Britian's best high commander. Both later faced woefully weak/compromised enemies. Auchinlek saved the British in Crusader and again after Gazala. He was disgustingly libeled by Churchill (whose competence in military matters is risible) and Montgomery, who barely won with material advantages vastly superior to anything his predecessors could have dreamed of. Montgonery's genuis... and I do not dismiss this as very valuable... was to hold his subordinates on a tight leash so their 'what-O, toodle-pip, let's charge those 88s!' tendencies could not lose battles.
@@lllordllloyd I do have to symphathise with Auchinleck, I mean the fact he didn't even have Richard O Connor under his command, but was instead stuck with such mediocre subordinates like Ritchie and with a lack of equipment, compared to when Monty had Brian Horrocks and Richard McReery and over a quarter of a million men. It really was a mammoth task he had to deal with.
@@TheImperatorKnight The very fact that no-one is clearly to blame shows the problem up in a stark light. The very structure of an Army is one of accountability and clear division of responsibilities. Poor communications are not an excuse as they are known and to be expected with HF radios. Notable however that the comms where they existed were appalling. Saying a unit had a good party tells the superior nothing other than that they've been in action. Amateurish and poor leadership seems to have been a recurring theme in the regular Armoured units, the 'donkey walloper' mentality, though interestingly far less so in the TA ones.
And I actually object to that one. American *journalism* is not really any worse than most other countries efforts, albeit various Americanisms of breathlessness over just-how-gosh-darned-amazing-[they]-are, whereas American *historians* are well known in the rest of the world for being generally terrible outside of a few areas (no surprises, exclusively American history) and a few good historians individually.
@@iatsd US "journalism" was dreadful during Britain's occupation of Greece and battles with the Greek commies. The British left-wing press was too. None of the journalists did any proper investigation; the lefty press was pro-commie, and the US press anti-British. Interestingly, even the Russians stayed out of it because they respected the spheres of influence agreed with the Anglo-Americans. The press is even worse today, of course,
Look at it the other way. We all know how accurate non American journalism is, especially during a war. Like nazi or commie journalism. DAMN!!!! ITS FAR WORST!!!!
@@iatsd You can switch out the word "American" and "Americanisms" for any other country and the same statement is true. Russia, China, England pre-WWI, France during Napoleon, Germany at multiple points in time, Japan in the run-up to 1937 and 1941, North Korea, etc... And History is biased on the opinions of the observer, but that has obviously gone over your head because otherwise you would be cognizant of TIK's multiple references to histories and historians who are blatantly pushing opinions that simply aren't true and often are blatant propoganda. Just like you are now. Your opinions and biases on "American" historians rendering them worse than the rest of the world is just blind prejudice and your own ego.
In case you are wondering what "bir" means it's a well. Libya is a desert where the caravans from old times stopped in these places to resupply with water hence cities were formed at places where wells were dug.
I really LOVE the exchange of radio messages with that forward observer. "The enemy is here" "No !" Was grima wormtongue feeding lies and casting a spell on that officer like in lord of the rings ? (Saruman attacked ! No he didn't!)
I do wonder if they had the same reporting problems in the desert that Americans had in Europe. It seems like almost every armored vehicle Americans spotted was a "Tiger Tank," and I wonder if every armored vehicle the British saw in desert warfare was a "Panzer IV." It could explain the denial if you're getting lots of false positives from people overreacting to armored cars performing reconnaissance.
I love how nonchalantly you mentioned the British accidentally destroyed one of their tanks trying to make tea lmaoo I had to do a retake to make sure I heard that correctly
Robert Crisp in his book 'Brazen Chariots" Commented on a time when ,over the radio . a definatly Tetunoic voice was heard to say, "You may, Brew up !" . That phrase had a double meaning in the desert war.
Its interesting that the British and German commands both had issues with insubordination, but German insubordination tended to be recklessly offensive whereas British insubordination tended to be excessive caution or defensiveness.
In a way. The latter is more common, since reckless leaders tend to be self-destructive. It's also much harder to convince your troops to do a seemingly suicidal charge, than to do a needless retreat. But hubris has always been the flipside to cowardice, and can be far more disastrous. But it should probably be noted that particularly in the Panzer school of thought, this was largely upended. The rapidity, concentrated force and novelty, along with the flexible command style of the German army (Auftragstaktik) allowed a highly skilled commander a completely different tool (I'm not sure to what extent they understood that themselves), that we sometimes now call Blitzkrieg. In essence, they'd move and improvise so fast, that strategy became obsolete. With that, the enemy army is suddenly effectively leaderless. Worse than that: their orders will be obsolete, leading to bad actions or outright morale loss and insubordination. Not that the Axis know what's going on, but they at least are prepared for that. And when needed, Rommel will defy death again to check things out himself. He'll generally know the battlefield, and that keeps his underlings confident. Do note that, to do that, you have to get rid of all incompetent commanders. It's risky, so you need leaders who take good calculated risks, and who when they roll poorly, can adapt to that problem.
The German officer/staff system was built on this from generations before: a senior staff officer was *supposed* to be critical of the unit commander, despite seniority. Friction, dispute and argument was a desirable and necessary part of command. For the British, disputes arose from idiotic regimental rivalry and who I didn't get on with at staff college in 1924.
British officers lacked punctuality in executing orders and seemed to be imbued with a muddle through it weak kneed effort while their brave men suffered immeasurably from the anatuerish efforts of their senior officers.
Something for everyone: great graphics; simpleton strategy; terrible tactics; subordinate squabbles; ludicrous logistics; mangling minefields; tank technicalities; getaway general; mystery mortars; paradoxical Pienaar; gobs of guns; problematically mental Prime Minister; roaming Rommel; Indian infantry; malicious Malta; walloped whisky; and tea brewing tank busters. And it was all well done. I behold a workman's wonder. Thank you TIK.
The real tragedy of the battle which only got a passing reference in this video was that the supply of whisky was hit and burned. Much good whiskey was lost on that tragic day and we remember it's passing with tears and sorrow.
Koenigs driver being his mistress seems so very French. Another awesome Battlestorm doco. On the one hand, Rommel acting exactly as we should expect him to. But for me, I feel for Ritchie in the same way I feel for Jellicoe at Jutland. When your subordinates are either not telling you anything or are painting a rosy picture when everything has gone to hell, its all but impossible to react to events in an appropriate way. At the same time you have to believe your subordinates are capable enough to direct their units in a way that leads to a good chance for success in whatever endeavour they are committed to. Ultimately Gazala was a complete disaster but perhaps the one thing Ritchie got right was to abandon the front line and get most of the South Africans and the 50th Division to safety.
@@GiovanniPietro9000 he rarely drove a tank and Frederick Von didn’t even learn how to drive one until the western front. Idk what to make of that. Always found that interesting
the selfishness, the lack of discipline, the lack of decisiveness and tactical and strategic calculation of British high command in this battle is mindboggling, and once again, you nailed your battlestorm TIK, i like that you put color radius around unit boxes now, small changes but it shows more of the size of the units and the area they occupied.
Yet Auchinlek has many modern apologists who ignore HIS army's poor tactics, it's failure to fight as a team & it's repeated failures mostly failing for repeating the same errors. As commander he was responsible.
@@cfbythebeach Who was responsible for such basic failures? Particularly not working as a team, a fundamental. "Jock Columns" were the Auk's pet advisor, Dormant-Smith's idea. What is clear is the DAK was under strength & a 1/3 the size of WDF, with major supply issues (critical for mechanized units) yet DAK ran rings around WDF/8th Army for 18 months using the same tactics over & over. But the lessons Rommel repeatedly gave them were ignored. Time & again losing 100s of tanks & tens of thousands of troops. It's unforgivable to make the same mistakes over & over.
@@prof_kaos9341 it was the infantry with anti tank guns and the gunners with 25 pdrs that bossed the show time and again. ANZAC infantry particularly. British armour just made up the numbers. Not exactly but look at their performance .
@@cfbythebeach Kia Ora, sadly it's about Britain's failure to understand & implement combined arms tactics & to fight as one team, helping each other. While Rommel repeatedly showed them how. Here are 2 Kiwi stories. At 1st Alamein, July '42, Gen Freyberg to Brig Kippenberger "I will never trust f-ing Gatehouse again" [Brigadier commanding the tanks], after the capture, whole, of 4th Brig, the most experienced of NZ div's 3 brigades (included Capt Upham). Captured once all the ATGs & 25pdr's were knocked out while waiting for the expected tank support to arrive. The tanks were sitting watching 2 miles away, having refused Kippenberger's requests to fulfill orders to advance to & support 4th Brig. An exact repeat of the loss of [then] Lt Col Kippenberger's 21st Brigade during Op. Crusader. As you know, tanks are to use their mobility & exploit thru a hole in the line, attacking the rear. At 2nd Alamein the furthest the tanks got was ~15miles behind the lines. Yet the last official action of 2nd Alamein was the NZ infantry doing the tanks job of exploiting. They got to Halfaya (Hellfire) Pass, 42miles behind the lines. A scratch company of ~150 organised by Kippenberger assaulted & captured the top. Previously Halfaya Pass had been a tough nut, this time quick thinking & a night attack captured 600 troops, 30 vehicles, a dozen heavy arty & over 20 ATGs, waiting to setup at 1st light.
That radio dispatch from the FO is just insane. It's impressive that he didn't start cussing out the damn officer when he can see the enemy right in front of him. It's COs like that who get people killed.
This sort of incompetence was very common in the previous war, too. But we have a generation of British historians dedicated to exonerating the Messerveys, Lumsdens and Ritchies of 1915-17. 'Learning curve', they call it. Back then, they had names like Gough, Haking and Butler. It's ironic the two men who lost their jobs out of this were the only commanders in the theatre with any intellectual clarity, Auk, and Dorman-Smith. It would have continued, too: the militarily foolish Churchill wanted Gott to command 8th Army. As a side note, one of the Grant units in this battle was led by Phillip Roberts, a Tank Corps man. Promoted on actual merit (shock!), he led the 11th Armoured Division in Normandy and beyond, Britain's best (but somewhat under-employed). Thank you TIK History for this candid, Frank outline of the battle.
К сожалению, очень плохо знаю английский, но как же меня восхищает качество видео : детальное, пространное рассмотрение тем, видеоряд, ссылки на источники, риторика автора - всё это рождает запредельную радость и мысли наподобие "Как же это прекрасно"! Этот канал - мой мотив учить английский.
Check out his other series they are all well researched. Stalingrad, Courland Pocket, Operation Crusader, Operation Compass. Or his many other 1hr videos.
@@alexalexin9491 with AI you can probably on the fly translate the captions as well. I have no idea how, but extremely likely it is possible already. MIght require downloading the video and running it through some other player. If I am remembering correctly ---I have seen in Windows Media Player - AI generated captions. Translation would just be a plug-in probably.
the massive work behind this video let alone the production is one of the greatest piece of history put in front of our screen....FOR FREE this is god's work!THANK YOU
Thank you. I sat here and absorbed the whole thing and after 2 hours and 50 minutes I was sorry to see it end. A true testament to you and your crew. Bravo.
This is spectacularly good. Best maps ever. Best analysis ever. This is why we become history lovers -- when history is done right, we can gain understanding.
Good thing the ‘good’ guys win WWII! Otherwise we would be speaking German instead of Arabic or Hindi and baby boomers would not be able to call everybody and everything they don’t like a ‘socialist!’ Yeah communism! We allied with the Soviets! Yeah!
Me: I've got too much to do, so I'll only watch about 15-20 minutes. 3 hours later. . . Kudos to TIK on an excellent presentation. Fantastic job, Mr. TIK.
This battle has all the best stereotypes of the belligerents. British: -Crappy tanks with no artillery or infantry support -Carryover philosophies of warfare from the first world war -Overly hesitant generals who ignore actionable intel -Setting a tank on fire trying to make tea Germans: -Rommel being praised as an amazing general for a pretty bog standard tactical move that works mostly because the British are dumb -The Germans running out of literally everything -The Germans getting resupplied just in the nick of time French: -Getting left behind by the British Italians: -Earning a participation ribbon South Africans: -Pienaar
The lack of generalship, refusing orders, failing to both assess their positions and those of the enemy and take the initiative are in the best tradition of the generals of the Confederate Army of the Tennessee. Bunch of incompetent cavaliers the lot.
Great to see this series back in action. Honestly shocked that this only came out to less than 3 hours. Then again, Crusader was arguably a more confusing mess of a battle to piece together (then again this one sorta is too). As an American, I place my hand over my heart at the admission that the Grant tank was far superior to anything on both sides at the time, even frustrating Rommel with it's effectiveness. It's something I never hear get brought up in various videos going over the tank, writing it off as a piece of junk stop gap before the Sherman.
It does feel like it should be longer, but I also think my script was very efficient for this one. I took my time and condensed a lot of information into a smaller space, so that might explain it. The reason it took so long to edit was because there was just so many battle-animations in there - it's way more condensed than Stalingrad was, which means there's more action per hour of the video, if that makes sense.
The British did not really like the tall high profile Grant tank, made at the British Lima tank works in Ohio, only its clumsily mounted more powerful gun. The German tanks were superior. Months later the Churchill tank was introduced, with additional 6-pdr anti-tank guns. Both made an impact. At El Alemein the first batch of Shermans out of Lima was introduced. However its effectiveness was blunted as there was limited crew training and spare parts, being giving a minor role.
It depends on the level of the comparison. It *was* objectively a terrible tank at the macro level. It was a good tank in the strategic context of North Africa at *that* precise time. In the context of tactical employment it was both good and bad. The Americans didn't even want to put it into series production, but the British were *so* short of vehicles and capacity that *they* ordered it in enough numbers to get into production. The Sherman was already a thing - just it was a thing that was ~9 months further away and that wasn't something the British could *wait* on.
@@iatsd The British financed the idle and semi dilapidated Lima locomotive works in Ohio, converting it to make tanks, using idle US industry as their own was working 24/7. They wanted to produce an improved and up-gunned version of the Crusader tank. The US said let's make a tank that is more suitable for both, so the Sherman came about which had heavy British and Canadian input in its design. But in the meantime to get a tank with a decent sized gun in the field asap, the Grant/Lee was made for only British use. The tank was advanced in its engineering tooling for manufacturing so went ahead as a stop-gap. The British tank procurement went off the rails with the Cromwell 18 months overdue, so the Grant and Sherman it had to be to fill the gap until the Cromwell, Comet and Centurion came along. The first batch of Shermans went to British forces in the desert being used at El Alemein II in Sept 1942. The US took control of the Lima tank factory on the condition they supply the British with Shermans for free. It still makes tanks today.
Just watched this excellent doco again. The conclusion is good, the tank commanders wanted the autonomy of Napoleonic cavalry, impossible under Combined [a clue] Arms. That said, having read many books on 8th Army, IMO the blame is mostly on Auchinlek. Fir over a yr he allowed his army to fight as uncooperating small units that, fulfilling expectations, get destroyed in these small packets, even Rommel gated it. Forget the 1,000 tanks lost what about the 10,000s of dead, wounded & captured troops? Criminal, stupid, unforgivable. The larger, supplied army destroys itself. By 2nd Alamein the 5 DAK Divs were at 25-30% of establisment & still almost held out v ~15 Commonwealth Divs. The tanks job is to race into a breakthrough & get as far behind the lines as possible. In this case the tanks got 12-15 miles behind the lines. Infantry, doing the tanks job went 42 miles & successfully with the last action of Alamein, captured Helfaya "Hellfire" Pass. 42miles v 15miles.
You have the BEST history videos on You Tube. Very impressive. Lots of detail, sources, and your very engaging. As an older historian I have been fortunate to speak with or hang out with people who were in WWII. Sadly almost all of them have passed on. Keep up the great work your doing!
Cue the Benny Hill theme! Seriously, the amount of chaos, misinformation and often sheer luck on both sides is astounding. Truly an eye-opener to the realities of the desert war.
Appointing Neil Ritchie as Army commander of the Eighth army was a disaster. I imagine the outcome here would have been much different if either Richard O Connor hadn't been captured or Auchinleck was running things.
Due to the way British armoured doctrine was at the time, I'm not so sure it would have made much difference. Yes, a better commander would have helped, but the issue here was that the British treated their tanks like cavalry, and the way the British officer corps was set up meant that the 'cavalry' weren't being commanded by armoured officers. They were being sent piecemeal into battle as that was what their doctrine said - and Auchinleck agreed with that policy (as indicated later during the retreat to El Alamein).
Despite all the criticism he seemed to have decent instincts about where his forces should be arranged to meet the threat from Axis attacks. The primary problem with his command was that he couldn't establish authority over all the subordinate commands. Frequently during the battle, a quick and coordinated counterattack would have sealed the fate of the Afrika Korps, but this never came to be because of squabbling subordinates. His frequent deferral of decisions to consensus is an admission of this weakness. You have to wonder if this attitude of his subordinates was largely motivated by petty resentment that they were passed in line by the well connected staff officer.
@@williamleskovec4063 Yeah Auchinleck just didn't have a tight grip on his officers, it was only when Monty showed up that the squabbling appears to have stopped and for the first time his subordinates would follow commands.
@@TheImperatorKnight I actually don't believe that the majority prefer it without. Every single "map documentary" on the Internet has music. Maybe run a poll?
I could do. But to avoid copyright, I also had to make the music myself, which wasn't the best, and it was also time consuming to make and add into the video. So I don't know.
Loved it! Exceptionally well done, loved the animations and the narration. Your interpretation of the varios sources really makes sense of the situation, while your presentation of the different views beforehand make the overall conclusions very interesting and pertinent for a present-day debate of this nearly 82 years old battle. Also, I really liked this new stile and the way this was condensed, a battlestrom less than 3h long is incredibly refreshing considering each one stalingrad episode was about 40 minutes! Thank you for your amazing work and for temporarly sticking to tanks without droping the Marmalade 😂
First of all: great video: well worth the wait. I almost feel guilty pointing out a small typo at 32:45. where (242 Panzer IV) should probably read (242 Panzer III). This is not a criticism (I know from personal experience how hard fully correct editing is), I just thought that you would want to know.
What an amazing treat. Thank you Team TIK. No matter how many times I’ve read about this battle, the magic you’ve woven to show and dissect it is truly wondrous. Bravo, bravo, bravo.
Brilliant, thank you so much for this! I guess Piennaar getting some stuff right is akin to a broken clock being right twice a day. I feel bad for what is about to happen to Klopper though... Continue your excellent work it is highly appreciated.
Which side was Pienaar on? This is only 40yrs after the Boer War where the Boers with German help (modern rifles & canon) gave the Brits a bloody nose leading to Boer civilians being put in camps. So many in SAF wanted to side with Germany ...
Hey tik great video and I loved how you went into the day by day events of the battle. One thing I wished you delved more into was the state of the Italian armored forces because during the battle of Gazala it’s where the Semovente da 75/18 made its first appearance south of Knightsbridge. It was the only armored vehicle in the axis arsenal at that time that could destroy not just Grants but even Shermans when they were later introduced. The Semovente was fairly well armored and was of similar size of a stug. The gun it utilized was an Ansaldo howitzer which had AP, HE, and most importantly HE rounds which were capable of devastating allied armor. On June 10th Ariete positions at Knightsbridge were under assault by British Stuarts and Grants. The battle engagement ended with 15 grants and 5 stuarts destroyed for only a loss on the Italian side of 2 M13/40s. The Semovente developed a reputation of being a competent tank killer and British preferred to have air wings strafe them rather engage them head on.
Rommel's great victory was really due to British negligence, and then they brag how much a genius Rommel was to cover their mistakes. Great work TIK. I certainly learnt something new from watching this.
Great video, TIK. If Tobruk's port had been taken it would have shortened the lines of communication from Tripoli by about 1270 km overland. From Benghazi it was half the distance, but its port couldn't handle the mass of supplies needed. I recall reading the Afrika Korps was consuming nine litres of fuel for every one delivered from Tripoli to Rommel's forces at the Egyptian border, which is about 200 km east of Tobrok. There is no rail line running east from Tripoli. To overcome this constraint Germany at times used subs to deliver fuel and other supplies off the coast just behind German lines . A _milchkuh_ carried 603 tonnes of re-supply fuel (about 8.45 bbl petrol = 1 tonne, so about 837,500 litres total), but often it was regular u-boats making the delivery of a much smaller quantity when the sub was stripped for such a mission. The 10 fuel resupply missions conducted by Italian subs from 10 May '41 to 31 December '41 delivered 1,086 tonnes of fuel. The Panzer IV on average consumed 2 litres of petrol per 1 km traveled on paved road.
Never ceases to amaze me that such high quality documentary work can be made by two guy. You've even inspired me to do my own! Thanks TIK you're a legend!! Edit: Two guys, Gigz is also a legend
Finally, finished up this video. I appreciate the in-depth analysis of this battle showing that the results were due more to British missteps than the brilliance of Rommel.
TiK, I believe this might be your best work. Excellent use of maps, well researched, and an excellent presentation. This along with your all encompassing Stalingrad series are now your benchmark.
This battle reminds me a lot of General Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson’s Shenandoah Valley campaign in 1862. Jackson faced overwhelming forces as well and was also able to concentrate his forces against piecemeal Union forces. Jackson’s victory made him very well known on both sides as well as internationally and gave his infantry the nickname foot cavalry due to how much ground they covered in a very short period of time. I’ve heard that Rommel studied Jackson’s tactics at some point but I’ve never seen anything to authenticate that. But his actions at Gazala seem to mirror what Jackson did 80 years earlier in Virginia.
FABULOUS! I WAS DELAYING A BIT TO MAKE TIME TO WATCH IT IN A SINGLE SITTING AND IT WAS A VERY SATISFYING SITTING. MAPS WERE AWESOME AND SO IS YOUR NARRATION. GREAT JOB!
I have seen all of your Battlestom videos (actually I think I have seen all of your videos) multiple times, but this has to be the best. Perfect balance between analysis and the battle map and the opinions are clear, which are yours and which are from others and from what sources! I also would like to say that the arguments of your own opinions, were very convincing. Good job and keep it going! Can't wait for the next one!
What is the point of even deploying Recon Troops if you are unwilling to listen to them? "Sir, I see German tanks advancing to our position!" "These are not the droids... I mean *tanks* you are looking for" Might as well stay at home and drink tea...
I really like the fluid nature of the blobby divisions that you represent. It makes a division seem more like a conglomeration of many pieces, which it is, instead of a monolith.
Yes yes, Rommel was reckless. He could have truly benefited from a competent staff officer to plan these operations by the book as a starting point. Then Rommel could lead from the front and take decisive action at crucial moments. His own planning efforts were poor. Having said that, he does deserve credit for his actions during the battle. The man led a supply column himself, under British fire to 21st Pz as it was running out of supply. Then he stayed at the front and suffered with his men as supplies continued to run out. He was clear eyed enough to see that surrender was a day away unless supplies arrived. One suspects his men held out and maintained the will to fight just that little bit longer because they knew Rommel was there. In their minds, they must have thought, the crazy fucker has really ran our asses into a crack this time, but he's here among us, suffering too, and he'll figure something out, because he has before. It's probably partly for the same reason that the supplies made it through the minefield. Men who believed in their commander's ability to pull their bacon out of the fire, braved minefields to move supplies to the front. Rarely has one man had the chance to make such a difference in battles as Rommel did here, because his men had confidence in his ability to lead. And when the opportunities arose, did her ever lead them! During the crucial attack, the man led a platoon into combat. Crazy reckless restless fucker! This is the fact. By the book, he was not even an above average commander. Yet when chaos reigned, because the British couldn't get their act together, the restlessness and personal bravery to be at the front and DO SOMETHING could be decisive. In battles where one corps fought another across an entire theatre of war, Rommel was incredible.
22:00 In the map, the islands of Rhodes and of the Dodecaneso, were Italians, not germans. The Kingdom of Italy had control of the area since the war with the Ottoman empire in 1912.
Late to the party. Had to watch it over three evenings in hourly installments due to work commitments. Talk about triumph of the will to switch off and go to bed! Brilliant stuff Tik!. I believe this is the first of your planned longer formats? Really worth the wait and the longer format works well imho. Learned a great deal here. Thanks as ever
Wow, another defete snached from the jaws of victory. I've learned so much about various campaigns and battles, amazing & marvellously informative. TIK, your efforts are much appreciated.
Couldn't agree more. Not all SAF units copied Pienaar & the SAF Arm. Cars had a well respected campaign, along with the Free French. Not forgetting the tragic story of the SAF 5th Battalion, wiped out, but found later, dead, but all facing the enemy & manning their guns (during Op Crusader)
I started watching last night i couldnt stop watching and had to forcd myself to stop on the morning of June 5th just to get some sleep so i wasnt tired for work this Morning. Definitely your best battlestorm yet!!
i think you are judging Rommel too harshly. ppl say he got lucky, but you could say he created those lucky situations by moving with confidence. the genius of the Blitzkrieg WAS recklessness at the right moment to expose the slow adaption rate of the enemy to new circumstances. also, fog of war was a thing back then. believe in the effup was the motto. if you press the enemy enough he will effup by miscommunication or indecisiveness.
yeah i also notice he just saying that Rommel was just a normal commander like he didn't turn the battle of north Africa in axis favor and push the whole British army toward Egypt after they win against Italy he also always giving excuses to the defeats of the British divisions unlike the axis divisions just saying oh Rommel win by luck he didn't even mention that he made a victory while attacking an army outnumbered his army
Hope you enjoy it! Considering I just did an all-nighter to get this out, I'm not so sure about the worklife balance... But yes, I've been trying to have more breaks.
It's amazing to think that a single British Infantry brigade (with some additional loose elements) was in a position where they nearly ended the war in North Africa.
TIK another brilliant work. I have Pitts' books and with your use of maps and dialogue bringing to life this amazing story, you are the best history teacher, I have ever had. Thanks again.
Thank you TIK! This is an excellent documentary. And nearly 3h long, with a breathtaking story, full of careful research and analysis, quite an achievement.
48:13 parisienne ligne de métro 6 station Bir Hakeim commemorates that. Lots of touristes and French of différents origines go though to Eiffel Tower without knowing signification of Bir Hakeim
@@dangerousidiot1111 Maybe because we had like dozens of episodes with Chuikov's crazy escapades and we only get 1 movie length episode with Messervy? Its as youtuber Nerdrotic says about weekly episodic television vs. the Netflix binge model. Binge is fun but talk about your show dies down within a few weeks after release. Whereas weekly gets you more exposure over time, more talk, more watercooler moments. Stalingrad was the weekly model, Gazala is Netflix binge. And that is why Chuikov will be with us for a long time and Messervy not.
Comment on the Desert Air Force at 1:19. The Spitfires sent were not 'additional', they were, incredibly, the first Spitfires sent to the desert, not arriving until August 1942. The Spitfire also sat out the fall of Singapore earlier in the year. The squadrons were held back in England to conduct useless 'rhubarb' operations that lost many planes and pilots while achieving precisely nothing (the loss rate to the two German jadgeschwader in France were, at times, around 20-1 against). Yes, even more incompetence at high levels.
It's not an easy task to hold viewers' attention for three hours but you really pulled it off. Although there was a mountain of detail I felt that I could follow the events of the narrative. The maps did much to make sense of it all.
Thank you, that's great feedback! And yes, the maps help a lot, which is why I think people struggle to fully comprehend the battles in the history books as there are never enough maps. I obviously have a lot of books, but I think there's a future for history in video format. I just wish more historians realised this.
It's been up a little over a day and I've watched it three times. This is definitely rewatchable content because sometimes I miss the little jokes, and I'm still getting more out of it. Great work!
It speaks very well of the British and commonwealth soldiers that with the command of their units not functioning the soldiers fought to keep the enemy back , regardless of the insanity of the fight .
As a American and a retired Colonel of Engineers I was fascinated and horrified how their was such dysfunction at the field grade and general officer level. To me this debacle was allowed to happen by Auchinlek and by Churchill. Churchill's actions bring in mind Gallipoli and the chase of the Goeben in WWI. Auchinlek appears to me not willing to break any eggs to get things done. And Rommel appears content to break and fry every egg he can get his hands on to win.
First of all, Awesome video!! Congratulations TIK History!! Now to the point: It seems there are clear discrepances among authors about the role played by Italian 101st "Trieste" Motorized Division at the beginning of the Battle of Gazala. Raymond Cartier in his already outdated book "Second World War" (original in French) states that the "Trieste" division lost contact with the rest of Axis mobile forces in the 1st night of the operation, due to a mistake in navigation in the desert and ended up smashing into the British line of mine fields. This video, at the beginning seems to be in line with that version. But other accounts of the battle (my apologies, I don't remember author names in this case) state that "Trieste" division was ordered by Rommel to go exactly where It went in order to open a corridor in the British mine fields, just south from the southernmost British "box" (north from Bir-Hacheim) with the purpose of later using it to resupply the rest of Axis mobile divisions. So "Trieste" was acting in accordance to the plan from the very beginning. This video states that "Trieste" was somehow "lost" for like 2 or 3 days, but later "Trieste" division reappears doing exactly what Rommel was in desperate need of being done, i.e., openning a corridor through the British mine fields. Any clarification on this point?
Hi all! Timestamps are available in the description, and subtitles are available. Some fun statistics: the video length is 2 hours 50 minutes, the script length is 27,318 words, contains 742 citations, from 57 sources, and the final render took 6 hours and 45 minutes. In total, all the files amount to 870 GBs of hard drive space.
This video has been in the works for the past 6 to 7 months, with my editor/animator (Gigz) deserving a big thank you for all her hard work! I also pulled an all-nighter last night to get it to you on time, so I really do hope you all enjoy it. A big thank you to Gigz, as well as Terri (who made the map and the thumbnail), and another a big THANK YOU to my Patreons and SubscribeStars for making this video possible.
For further reading, I highly recommend the series “The Crucible of War” by Barrie Pitt, which is probably the best all-round account of the North African Campaign. The South African “Crisis in the Desert” is another good book, but can be difficult to get a hold of, is biased towards Pienaar, and is a bit out of date. Playfair’s Official British History is also recommended, even if it’s out of date and biased towards Auchinleck. Carver’s “Dilemma’s of the Desert” is a necessary read if you’re interested in the debate about whether Ritchie “went rogue” in this battle or not. Forczyk’s “Desert Armour” is also a decent modern source for this battle and others.
🥳
Just clicked go and thumbing up already! 👍
All these figures are a testimony of your just and fair search into history, a truly one of kind.
Greetings from Saudi Arabia.
Tell Gigz "Well done". Thanks again for all your hard work. I'm only a little way into it and it's outstanding to say the least. Now, back to the video. Cheers from Tennessee
Thanks for all your and your editor's hard work.
It's Awesome to see so many people excited for what is essentially a very well prepared and produced independent documentary film. Great work TIK! We are extremely grateful for what you do.
Thank you so much! The feedback so far has been great
Well said.
AMEN!!!
@@TheImperatorKnight I appreciate your hard work here and I really don't understand any hatred towards you, but it takes alsorts . Please keep up the great content and wonderful presentations I like them
As history tends to repeat itself if not taken on account.👍
Forward Observer: '' Rommel himself just passed my position and was smilling and waving at me, I repeat, Rommel himself is here!''
Officer from 30 Corps: ''There are no enemy forces in your area''.
"I have been wounded. The Germans are treating me. The medic is very polite, his name is Franz. Say hello, Franz."
„Hallo!"
"We say again, there are no, repeat no, enemy troops near you."
The five stages of grief in the British Army:
1. Denial
2. Denial
3. Denial
4. Denial
5. Denial
@@gernhard.reinholdsen I would change 5 to: "ok, you're right, but we don't change the plan, because he might use pincer maneuver"
I think Rommel kept letting Messervy go. He was one of the Germans' best assets.
"... a sandstorm bought an end to the fighting, however, the British lost a Grant tank after setting fire to it while attempting to brew some tea"
*rule britannia is heard faintly in the distance over the sounds of the sandstorm*
Accidentally setting your tank on fire from brewing tea is the most British thing ever 😂
"Oh gosh, the tank is on fire..."
"Oh bugger, how did that happen?"
"No idea mate, but we should probably escape it."
"Nooo, my tea!"
The rest of the company: "what a nice opportunity to brew more tea..."
@@pavelslama5543 *rule Britannia intensifies*
I've known 4 BVs which have been left on and therefore boiled dry and potentially caused a fire destroying the vehicle. Though I was light infantry and none of our own vehicles had BVs. So the proud tradition continues!
@@ChurchoftheIgnorati *rule Britannia intensifies*
Oh my god he's back, over 2 and a half hours on the battle of Gazala, what a treat. Thank you TIK.
One guy in his apartment does a better job delivering history videos than the "history" television channels are willing to do.
"History" television channels? Oh, the Aliens and Jeebus channels?
Yes good sound effects and visual effects seems to be inversely related to the quality of the content
The initial battle of Gazala in a nutshell:
Recon Brigade: "I see over 50 tanks attacking the south"
Command: "No you dont"
Recon Brigade: Yes. I do.
Command: No. You dont.
Recon Brigade: Yes. I do.
Command: No. You dont.
And then all hell broke loose...
Like a real life Monty Python sketch! XD
@@t.hurson2298 - They like to argue in their spare time.
You didn't see Graphite, you didn't!
Lol. Keystone cops.
Needed one more paragraph.
Recon Brigade: ...........
Command: Told ya.
Messervy went on to distinguish himself in Burma as a corps commander in the 14th Army. Under a very capable commander in Bill Slim and without the rivalries and hatreds that abounded in Auchinleck's MEC, Messervy was able to function as a very capable corps commander who played a big role in both the battle of Kohima and the capture of Rangoon. One of the lessons Messervy seems to have learned from his time as 7th AD commander is the importance of combined arms. He insisted that the 14th army should use medium tanks, not just light ones, and had Grant tanks shipped out to India for use in Burma where they proved crucial at Kohima.
Ritchie too has a redemption arc. He returned to the UK and was given a division to command there. He did well enough and was given XII Corps to command in the British 2nd Army in NW Europe where he did a very competent job and showed good leadership throughout.
In both Messervy's and Ritchie's cases it looks like they were undermined by the command atmosphere and chaos of Auchinleck's MEC. Whilst some of his strategy was sound, he allowed far too much infighting, chaos and confusion amongst his subordinates therefore the defeats and setbacks in North Africa under his command lead me to think he bore the lion's share of the blame because he didn't control his army in the same way that Slim and Montgomery could.
I agree. As much as Messervy and Ritchie made mistakes, the overall situation was not favourable to them due to Auchinleck and Churchill. I don't think any one person can be blamed entirely for Gazala, it was just a whole host of bad decisions that were made during and prior to the battle that contributed to the defeat. That said, it's understandable why certain individuals did receive the blame.
Then again Auchinleck also got booted to India replacing Wavell (again) and as overall commander in India he was, of sorts, Messervy's boss again. And Slim credits Auchinleck massively in his book for giving him the support and means to build 14th Army. I reckon that as TIK has said, it was a combinations of bad decisions, poor tactical and operational doctrine, Churchill breathing down everyone's necks, and the wrong people at the wrong places at the wrong time. Ritchie would be a decent corps commander in NW Europe, but apparently not suited for army command. Peter Principle at work. And Messervy, being an infantry officer of the Indian Army was probably not the most optimal choice to head an armored division in the chaos of 1942.
The irony is that Messervy would end up Pakistan's 1st chief of the Pakistani Army. Which meant that when Pakistan and India went to war with each other he would command an army to fight against an army commanded by another British general, as General Lockhart commanded the Indian Army. And both armies were under nominal control of......., drumroll, Auchinleck, then supreme commander of both country's armies.
You're blaming the only competent guy in the theatre for the problems (Churchill and Montgomery shared your views). Auchinlek was from the Indian Army and was constantly undermined by the British Army officers, especially the cavalry and other polo/drinks club types. The record makes it clear he was constantly trying to get them to think much more clearly about how to fight modern war, but they were woefully ill-equipped by temperament and training.
Auchinlek had to work with what he had: there were very few capable British armour commanders and much demand for them. The need to work with what he had, and his role as a theatre commander, not 8th Army commander, meant he had to use the good men to keep an eye on the plodders. On top of that, offciers who were fine against Italians or second-rate enemies often struggled with the pace and dynamism of Rommel: when the default British order was always "Charge!!", the Desert Fox just had to deploy his AT guns and flash around a few tanks to draw the British onto them.
Which brings us to the British Army itself: Carver says 'we felt like amateurs fighting professionals' and he notes his (cavalry) regiment was just handed tanks of the eve of war and told to get on with it. The British military establishment was not cleaned out after the First World War, and most of the old regimental class system was intact. So they resisted modernisation in the interwar period and eventually saw off Hobart (where was he when needed? In the freaking Home Guard!) and the whole revolution in mobile warfare largely passed them by.
Back to polo, while Hitler's men were learning all they could in Spain. The whole beloved 'regimental tradition' inhibited combined arms so much that is was still lacking in Normandy in 1944. From Belgium to Singapore, co-ordinating forces was beyond Britian's generals... especially depressing given that in 1918 they were the best in the world. The infighting and division you speak of- and it was very real- was just an extension of the British Army's culture. Really only Montgomery had the moral authority and will to clean our divisional and even corps commanders: and that moral authority was built on bullshit.
You are generous to Messervey and Ritchie. Neither had a comparable challenge after leaving the desert, Messervey had the enormous benefit of serving under Britian's best high commander. Both later faced woefully weak/compromised enemies.
Auchinlek saved the British in Crusader and again after Gazala. He was disgustingly libeled by Churchill (whose competence in military matters is risible) and Montgomery, who barely won with material advantages vastly superior to anything his predecessors could have dreamed of. Montgonery's genuis... and I do not dismiss this as very valuable... was to hold his subordinates on a tight leash so their 'what-O, toodle-pip, let's charge those 88s!' tendencies could not lose battles.
@@lllordllloyd I do have to symphathise with Auchinleck, I mean the fact he didn't even have Richard O Connor under his command, but was instead stuck with such mediocre subordinates like Ritchie and with a lack of equipment, compared to when Monty had Brian Horrocks and Richard McReery and over a quarter of a million men. It really was a mammoth task he had to deal with.
@@TheImperatorKnight The very fact that no-one is clearly to blame shows the problem up in a stark light. The very structure of an Army is one of accountability and clear division of responsibilities. Poor communications are not an excuse as they are known and to be expected with HF radios. Notable however that the comms where they existed were appalling. Saying a unit had a good party tells the superior nothing other than that they've been in action. Amateurish and poor leadership seems to have been a recurring theme in the regular Armoured units, the 'donkey walloper' mentality, though interestingly far less so in the TA ones.
“We all know how accurate American journalism is, especially during a war.” DAMN
And I actually object to that one. American *journalism* is not really any worse than most other countries efforts, albeit various Americanisms of breathlessness over just-how-gosh-darned-amazing-[they]-are, whereas American *historians* are well known in the rest of the world for being generally terrible outside of a few areas (no surprises, exclusively American history) and a few good historians individually.
@@iatsd Its joke. Lighten up, buddy
@@iatsd US "journalism" was dreadful during Britain's occupation of Greece and battles with the Greek commies. The British left-wing press was too. None of the journalists did any proper investigation; the lefty press was pro-commie, and the US press anti-British. Interestingly, even the Russians stayed out of it because they respected the spheres of influence agreed with the Anglo-Americans. The press is even worse today, of course,
Look at it the other way.
We all know how accurate non American journalism is, especially during a war. Like nazi or commie journalism.
DAMN!!!! ITS FAR WORST!!!!
@@iatsd You can switch out the word "American" and "Americanisms" for any other country and the same statement is true. Russia, China, England pre-WWI, France during Napoleon, Germany at multiple points in time, Japan in the run-up to 1937 and 1941, North Korea, etc... And History is biased on the opinions of the observer, but that has obviously gone over your head because otherwise you would be cognizant of TIK's multiple references to histories and historians who are blatantly pushing opinions that simply aren't true and often are blatant propoganda.
Just like you are now. Your opinions and biases on "American" historians rendering them worse than the rest of the world is just blind prejudice and your own ego.
In case you are wondering what "bir" means it's a well.
Libya is a desert where the caravans from old times stopped in these places to resupply with water hence cities were formed at places where wells were dug.
Thumbs up for the tidbit.
Good to know!
noice
CONVENIENT TERM FOR BRITS AND GERMANS ALIKE, OBVIOUSLY SOMETHING TO BE DRUNK.
Libya
I really LOVE the exchange of radio messages with that forward observer.
"The enemy is here"
"No !"
Was grima wormtongue feeding lies and casting a spell on that officer like in lord of the rings ?
(Saruman attacked !
No he didn't!)
I do wonder if they had the same reporting problems in the desert that Americans had in Europe. It seems like almost every armored vehicle Americans spotted was a "Tiger Tank," and I wonder if every armored vehicle the British saw in desert warfare was a "Panzer IV."
It could explain the denial if you're getting lots of false positives from people overreacting to armored cars performing reconnaissance.
I love how nonchalantly you mentioned the British accidentally destroyed one of their tanks trying to make tea lmaoo I had to do a retake to make sure I heard that correctly
Literally "brewed" it up!!😅
@@jamesbeeching6138 brits being brits
But DID they manage to get their tea? That's the real question.
Immediately thought of the Uboat commander who lost his boat due to incorrectly using the toilet.
Robert Crisp in his book 'Brazen Chariots" Commented on a time when ,over the radio . a definatly Tetunoic voice was heard to say, "You may, Brew up !" . That phrase had a double meaning in the desert war.
YES! Honey, wake up! TIK just posted Battlestorm Gazala!!!!
"...and I have absolutely no idea why she divorced me..." lol.
You're lucky your better half is into history!
Its interesting that the British and German commands both had issues with insubordination, but German insubordination tended to be recklessly offensive whereas British insubordination tended to be excessive caution or defensiveness.
Probably something to do with NAZI ideology, the cult of the offensive and a sub conscious fear of a long war.
In a way. The latter is more common, since reckless leaders tend to be self-destructive. It's also much harder to convince your troops to do a seemingly suicidal charge, than to do a needless retreat. But hubris has always been the flipside to cowardice, and can be far more disastrous.
But it should probably be noted that particularly in the Panzer school of thought, this was largely upended. The rapidity, concentrated force and novelty, along with the flexible command style of the German army (Auftragstaktik) allowed a highly skilled commander a completely different tool (I'm not sure to what extent they understood that themselves), that we sometimes now call Blitzkrieg. In essence, they'd move and improvise so fast, that strategy became obsolete.
With that, the enemy army is suddenly effectively leaderless. Worse than that: their orders will be obsolete, leading to bad actions or outright morale loss and insubordination. Not that the Axis know what's going on, but they at least are prepared for that. And when needed, Rommel will defy death again to check things out himself. He'll generally know the battlefield, and that keeps his underlings confident.
Do note that, to do that, you have to get rid of all incompetent commanders. It's risky, so you need leaders who take good calculated risks, and who when they roll poorly, can adapt to that problem.
The German officer/staff system was built on this from generations before: a senior staff officer was *supposed* to be critical of the unit commander, despite seniority. Friction, dispute and argument was a desirable and necessary part of command.
For the British, disputes arose from idiotic regimental rivalry and who I didn't get on with at staff college in 1924.
British officers lacked punctuality in executing orders and seemed to be imbued with a muddle through it weak kneed effort while their brave men suffered immeasurably from the anatuerish efforts of their senior officers.
Something for everyone: great graphics; simpleton strategy; terrible tactics; subordinate squabbles; ludicrous logistics; mangling minefields; tank technicalities; getaway general; mystery mortars; paradoxical Pienaar; gobs of guns; problematically mental Prime Minister; roaming Rommel; Indian infantry; malicious Malta; walloped whisky; and tea brewing tank busters. And it was all well done. I behold a workman's wonder. Thank you TIK.
The real tragedy of the battle which only got a passing reference in this video was that the supply of whisky was hit and burned. Much good whiskey was lost on that tragic day and we remember it's passing with tears and sorrow.
I've read that the Allies loved capturing Italian supplies because of their amazing food rations.
Brits should have let the Axis capture and consume said whiskey dump; result of battle then could have been quite different.
Three of my Uncles died during that Battle...got a joke about them?
@@brendanukveteran2360 no offence intended to you and your family mate.
My apologies if my comment came across that way.
Koenigs driver being his mistress seems so very French. Another awesome Battlestorm doco. On the one hand, Rommel acting exactly as we should expect him to. But for me, I feel for Ritchie in the same way I feel for Jellicoe at Jutland. When your subordinates are either not telling you anything or are painting a rosy picture when everything has gone to hell, its all but impossible to react to events in an appropriate way. At the same time you have to believe your subordinates are capable enough to direct their units in a way that leads to a good chance for success in whatever endeavour they are committed to. Ultimately Gazala was a complete disaster but perhaps the one thing Ritchie got right was to abandon the front line and get most of the South Africans and the 50th Division to safety.
In the end he got a grip on the battle and at least managed to save most of the infantry.
It wasn't much, but it was something.
Thank you. My father was killed during the Battle of Gazala. Your detailed description helps me to understand the context of his sacrifice
Sorry to hear about your father. God bless.
Was he german?
742 citations…
Closer to reality then reality
FEELS LIKE WE ARE INSIDE ROMMEL'S TANK!
@@GiovanniPietro9000 he rarely drove a tank and Frederick Von didn’t even learn how to drive one until the western front.
Idk what to make of that.
Always found that interesting
And what do you get out of pretending everything and everything you don’t like is socialist?
@@AustrianPainter14 username checks out
the selfishness, the lack of discipline, the lack of decisiveness and tactical and strategic calculation of British high command in this battle is mindboggling, and once again, you nailed your battlestorm TIK, i like that you put color radius around unit boxes now, small changes but it shows more of the size of the units and the area they occupied.
Yet Auchinlek has many modern apologists who ignore HIS army's poor tactics, it's failure to fight as a team & it's repeated failures mostly failing for repeating the same errors. As commander he was responsible.
@@prof_kaos9341 yet the Auk advised Richie to fight in divisional strength not brigade strength.
@@cfbythebeach Who was responsible for such basic failures? Particularly not working as a team, a fundamental. "Jock Columns" were the Auk's pet advisor, Dormant-Smith's idea. What is clear is the DAK was under strength & a 1/3 the size of WDF, with major supply issues (critical for mechanized units) yet DAK ran rings around WDF/8th Army for 18 months using the same tactics over & over. But the lessons Rommel repeatedly gave them were ignored. Time & again losing 100s of tanks & tens of thousands of troops. It's unforgivable to make the same mistakes over & over.
@@prof_kaos9341 it was the infantry with anti tank guns and the gunners with 25 pdrs that bossed the show time and again. ANZAC infantry particularly. British armour just made up the numbers. Not exactly but look at their performance .
@@cfbythebeach Kia Ora, sadly it's about Britain's failure to understand & implement combined arms tactics & to fight as one team, helping each other. While Rommel repeatedly showed them how. Here are 2 Kiwi stories. At 1st Alamein, July '42, Gen Freyberg to Brig Kippenberger "I will never trust f-ing Gatehouse again" [Brigadier commanding the tanks], after the capture, whole, of 4th Brig, the most experienced of NZ div's 3 brigades (included Capt Upham). Captured once all the ATGs & 25pdr's were knocked out while waiting for the expected tank support to arrive. The tanks were sitting watching 2 miles away, having refused Kippenberger's requests to fulfill orders to advance to & support 4th Brig. An exact repeat of the loss of [then] Lt Col Kippenberger's 21st Brigade during Op. Crusader. As you know, tanks are to use their mobility & exploit thru a hole in the line, attacking the rear. At 2nd Alamein the furthest the tanks got was ~15miles behind the lines. Yet the last official action of 2nd Alamein was the NZ infantry doing the tanks job of exploiting. They got to Halfaya (Hellfire) Pass, 42miles behind the lines. A scratch company of ~150 organised by Kippenberger assaulted & captured the top. Previously Halfaya Pass had been a tough nut, this time quick thinking & a night attack captured 600 troops, 30 vehicles, a dozen heavy arty & over 20 ATGs, waiting to setup at 1st light.
That radio dispatch from the FO is just insane. It's impressive that he didn't start cussing out the damn officer when he can see the enemy right in front of him. It's COs like that who get people killed.
Yes, lions led by donkeys!!!
It reads like a comedy.
“I can see the enemies”
“No you don’t”
“I can physically see rows of tanks approaching me!”
“I disagree”
This sort of incompetence was very common in the previous war, too. But we have a generation of British historians dedicated to exonerating the Messerveys, Lumsdens and Ritchies of 1915-17. 'Learning curve', they call it. Back then, they had names like Gough, Haking and Butler.
It's ironic the two men who lost their jobs out of this were the only commanders in the theatre with any intellectual clarity, Auk, and Dorman-Smith. It would have continued, too: the militarily foolish Churchill wanted Gott to command 8th Army.
As a side note, one of the Grant units in this battle was led by Phillip Roberts, a Tank Corps man. Promoted on actual merit (shock!), he led the 11th Armoured Division in Normandy and beyond, Britain's best (but somewhat under-employed).
Thank you TIK History for this candid, Frank outline of the battle.
@@ryanelliott71698 "Who you gonna believe, me or your lying eyes?"
К сожалению, очень плохо знаю английский, но как же меня восхищает качество видео : детальное, пространное рассмотрение тем, видеоряд, ссылки на источники, риторика автора - всё это рождает запредельную радость и мысли наподобие "Как же это прекрасно"! Этот канал - мой мотив учить английский.
Для лучшего понимания стоит включать субтитры и снижать скорость воспроизведения где-то до х0.85.
Check out his other series they are all well researched. Stalingrad, Courland Pocket, Operation Crusader, Operation Compass. Or his many other 1hr videos.
@@alexalexin9491 with AI you can probably on the fly translate the captions as well. I have no idea how, but extremely likely it is possible already. MIght require downloading the video and running it through some other player. If I am remembering correctly ---I have seen in Windows Media Player - AI generated captions. Translation would just be a plug-in probably.
Try Yandex translation.
(попробуйте яндекс ютуб перевод)
I used google translate
(Я использовал переводчик гугл)
Well seems like I won't go to bed early after all, thanks for your hard work TIK
the massive work behind this video let alone the production is one of the greatest piece of history put in front of our screen....FOR FREE
this is god's work!THANK YOU
I rarely feel a need to thank a yt creator for their vidoes but your work really cannot be appreciated enough
Thank you TiK
Thank you. I sat here and absorbed the whole thing and after 2 hours and 50 minutes I was sorry to see it end. A true testament to you and your crew. Bravo.
This is spectacularly good. Best maps ever. Best analysis ever. This is why we become history lovers -- when history is done right, we can gain understanding.
Finally, the legend of Pienaar continues.
Many in SAF wanted to side with Germany who had helped them in the Boer War only 40yrs earlier
@@prof_kaos9341 yeah, they were bad losers
These North African campaigns are wild, complex, and too much forgotten about. Excellent video!
Good thing the ‘good’ guys win WWII! Otherwise we would be speaking German instead of Arabic or Hindi and baby boomers would not be able to call everybody and everything they don’t like a ‘socialist!’ Yeah communism! We allied with the Soviets! Yeah!
Me: I've got too much to do, so I'll only watch about 15-20 minutes.
3 hours later. . .
Kudos to TIK on an excellent presentation. Fantastic job, Mr. TIK.
Another Tik battlestorm video. Like having Christmas in May.
This battle has all the best stereotypes of the belligerents.
British:
-Crappy tanks with no artillery or infantry support
-Carryover philosophies of warfare from the first world war
-Overly hesitant generals who ignore actionable intel
-Setting a tank on fire trying to make tea
Germans:
-Rommel being praised as an amazing general for a pretty bog standard tactical move that works mostly because the British are dumb
-The Germans running out of literally everything
-The Germans getting resupplied just in the nick of time
French:
-Getting left behind by the British
Italians:
-Earning a participation ribbon
South Africans:
-Pienaar
Just watched the first 10 minutes - oh my god this is brilliant.
What a fabulous treat which really opens up the myth of Rommel. Thank you TIK - immensely informative!
The wait is over!
I believe you were first! And yes, I'm also really happy it's finally out
I wish he didn't start with the word "PREVIOUSLY" threw me for a loop thinking I missed one LOL
AAAAND....the wait for Battlestorm: El Alamein begins!
The lack of generalship, refusing orders, failing to both assess their positions and those of the enemy and take the initiative are in the best tradition of the generals of the Confederate Army of the Tennessee. Bunch of incompetent cavaliers the lot.
Great to see this series back in action. Honestly shocked that this only came out to less than 3 hours. Then again, Crusader was arguably a more confusing mess of a battle to piece together (then again this one sorta is too).
As an American, I place my hand over my heart at the admission that the Grant tank was far superior to anything on both sides at the time, even frustrating Rommel with it's effectiveness. It's something I never hear get brought up in various videos going over the tank, writing it off as a piece of junk stop gap before the Sherman.
It does feel like it should be longer, but I also think my script was very efficient for this one. I took my time and condensed a lot of information into a smaller space, so that might explain it. The reason it took so long to edit was because there was just so many battle-animations in there - it's way more condensed than Stalingrad was, which means there's more action per hour of the video, if that makes sense.
The British did not really like the tall high profile Grant tank, made at the British Lima tank works in Ohio, only its clumsily mounted more powerful gun. The German tanks were superior.
Months later the Churchill tank was introduced, with additional 6-pdr anti-tank guns. Both made an impact.
At El Alemein the first batch of Shermans out of Lima was introduced. However its effectiveness was blunted as there was limited crew training and spare parts, being giving a minor role.
It was also was more reliable. I didn’t realize the armor was so effective. Thanks TIK.
It depends on the level of the comparison. It *was* objectively a terrible tank at the macro level. It was a good tank in the strategic context of North Africa at *that* precise time. In the context of tactical employment it was both good and bad.
The Americans didn't even want to put it into series production, but the British were *so* short of vehicles and capacity that *they* ordered it in enough numbers to get into production. The Sherman was already a thing - just it was a thing that was ~9 months further away and that wasn't something the British could *wait* on.
@@iatsd
The British financed the idle and semi dilapidated Lima locomotive works in Ohio, converting it to make tanks, using idle US industry as their own was working 24/7. They wanted to produce an improved and up-gunned version of the Crusader tank.
The US said let's make a tank that is more suitable for both, so the Sherman came about which had heavy British and Canadian input in its design. But in the meantime to get a tank with a decent sized gun in the field asap, the Grant/Lee was made for only British use. The tank was advanced in its engineering tooling for manufacturing so went ahead as a stop-gap.
The British tank procurement went off the rails with the Cromwell 18 months overdue, so the Grant and Sherman it had to be to fill the gap until the Cromwell, Comet and Centurion came along.
The first batch of Shermans went to British forces in the desert being used at El Alemein II in Sept 1942.
The US took control of the Lima tank factory on the condition they supply the British with Shermans for free. It still makes tanks today.
Just watched this excellent doco again. The conclusion is good, the tank commanders wanted the autonomy of Napoleonic cavalry, impossible under Combined [a clue] Arms. That said, having read many books on 8th Army, IMO the blame is mostly on Auchinlek. Fir over a yr he allowed his army to fight as uncooperating small units that, fulfilling expectations, get destroyed in these small packets, even Rommel gated it. Forget the 1,000 tanks lost what about the 10,000s of dead, wounded & captured troops? Criminal, stupid, unforgivable. The larger, supplied army destroys itself. By 2nd Alamein the 5 DAK Divs were at 25-30% of establisment & still almost held out v ~15 Commonwealth Divs. The tanks job is to race into a breakthrough & get as far behind the lines as possible. In this case the tanks got 12-15 miles behind the lines. Infantry, doing the tanks job went 42 miles & successfully with the last action of Alamein, captured Helfaya "Hellfire" Pass. 42miles v 15miles.
You have the BEST history videos on You Tube. Very impressive. Lots of detail, sources, and your very engaging. As an older historian I have been fortunate to speak with or hang out with people who were in WWII. Sadly almost all of them have passed on. Keep up the great work your doing!
quality of this one is unmatched, just finished watching, well done tik!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Cue the Benny Hill theme! Seriously, the amount of chaos, misinformation and often sheer luck on both sides is astounding. Truly an eye-opener to the realities of the desert war.
Appointing Neil Ritchie as Army commander of the Eighth army was a disaster. I imagine the outcome here would have been much different if either Richard O Connor hadn't been captured or Auchinleck was running things.
Due to the way British armoured doctrine was at the time, I'm not so sure it would have made much difference. Yes, a better commander would have helped, but the issue here was that the British treated their tanks like cavalry, and the way the British officer corps was set up meant that the 'cavalry' weren't being commanded by armoured officers. They were being sent piecemeal into battle as that was what their doctrine said - and Auchinleck agreed with that policy (as indicated later during the retreat to El Alamein).
Despite all the criticism he seemed to have decent instincts about where his forces should be arranged to meet the threat from Axis attacks. The primary problem with his command was that he couldn't establish authority over all the subordinate commands. Frequently during the battle, a quick and coordinated counterattack would have sealed the fate of the Afrika Korps, but this never came to be because of squabbling subordinates. His frequent deferral of decisions to consensus is an admission of this weakness.
You have to wonder if this attitude of his subordinates was largely motivated by petty resentment that they were passed in line by the well connected staff officer.
@@williamleskovec4063 Yeah Auchinleck just didn't have a tight grip on his officers, it was only when Monty showed up that the squabbling appears to have stopped and for the first time his subordinates would follow commands.
Yep 100% agree...The loss of O'connor was a worse blow than losing a whole Division...😢
And while yes tactics were bad if O'connor hadn't been captured who knows how Crusader would have panned out???
Gotta say, for like a umpteenth time now, I do sorely miss the upbeat music at the start of battlestorm episodes and when major action happens
I miss the music too, but people complained so I stopped putting any in 🤷♂
@@TheImperatorKnight I actually don't believe that the majority prefer it without. Every single "map documentary" on the Internet has music.
Maybe run a poll?
I could do. But to avoid copyright, I also had to make the music myself, which wasn't the best, and it was also time consuming to make and add into the video. So I don't know.
@@TheImperatorKnight I did like the Music Personally. (:
I, too, miss the Panzers Advance music.
Loved it! Exceptionally well done, loved the animations and the narration. Your interpretation of the varios sources really makes sense of the situation, while your presentation of the different views beforehand make the overall conclusions very interesting and pertinent for a present-day debate of this nearly 82 years old battle. Also, I really liked this new stile and the way this was condensed, a battlestrom less than 3h long is incredibly refreshing considering each one stalingrad episode was about 40 minutes! Thank you for your amazing work and for temporarly sticking to tanks without droping the Marmalade 😂
First of all: great video: well worth the wait. I almost feel guilty pointing out a small typo at 32:45. where (242 Panzer IV) should probably read (242 Panzer III). This is not a criticism (I know from personal experience how hard fully correct editing is), I just thought that you would want to know.
Yeah you're correct, a few people have pointed this out. There are a few other minor mistakes like that in the video, so see how many you can spot :)
@TheImperatorKnight
TIK, any mistakes you make are deliberate mistakes that test your subscribers to see if they're paying attention 🇬🇧
I enjoyed the Stalingrad and Kharkov coverage alot, but this is truly excellent TIK. Well done sir, its going into my favorites.
Greetings from Czech republic ❤ Jaroslav
What an amazing treat. Thank you Team TIK. No matter how many times I’ve read about this battle, the magic you’ve woven to show and dissect it is truly wondrous. Bravo, bravo, bravo.
Those active citations and length scales at the bottom of the screen are amazing.
Brilliant, thank you so much for this! I guess Piennaar getting some stuff right is akin to a broken clock being right twice a day. I feel bad for what is about to happen to Klopper though...
Continue your excellent work it is highly appreciated.
Which side was Pienaar on? This is only 40yrs after the Boer War where the Boers with German help (modern rifles & canon) gave the Brits a bloody nose leading to Boer civilians being put in camps. So many in SAF wanted to side with Germany ...
Hey tik great video and I loved how you went into the day by day events of the battle. One thing I wished you delved more into was the state of the Italian armored forces because during the battle of Gazala it’s where the Semovente da 75/18 made its first appearance south of Knightsbridge.
It was the only armored vehicle in the axis arsenal at that time that could destroy not just Grants but even Shermans when they were later introduced. The Semovente was fairly well armored and was of similar size of a stug. The gun it utilized was an Ansaldo howitzer which had AP, HE, and most importantly HE rounds which were capable of devastating allied armor.
On June 10th Ariete positions at Knightsbridge were under assault by British Stuarts and Grants. The battle engagement ended with 15 grants and 5 stuarts destroyed for only a loss on the Italian side of 2 M13/40s.
The Semovente developed a reputation of being a competent tank killer and British preferred to have air wings strafe them rather engage them head on.
Rommel's great victory was really due to British negligence, and then they brag how much a genius Rommel was to cover their mistakes. Great work TIK. I certainly learnt something new from watching this.
Great video, TIK.
If Tobruk's port had been taken it would have shortened the lines of communication from Tripoli by about 1270 km overland. From Benghazi it was half the distance, but its port couldn't handle the mass of supplies needed.
I recall reading the Afrika Korps was consuming nine litres of fuel for every one delivered from Tripoli to Rommel's forces at the Egyptian border, which is about 200 km east of Tobrok. There is no rail line running east from Tripoli. To overcome this constraint Germany at times used subs to deliver fuel and other supplies off the coast just behind German lines . A _milchkuh_ carried 603 tonnes of re-supply fuel (about 8.45 bbl petrol = 1 tonne, so about 837,500 litres total), but often it was regular u-boats making the delivery of a much smaller quantity when the sub was stripped for such a mission. The 10 fuel resupply missions conducted by Italian subs from 10 May '41 to 31 December '41 delivered 1,086 tonnes of fuel. The Panzer IV on average consumed 2 litres of petrol per 1 km traveled on paved road.
Every Battlestorms are a MASTERPIECE and a piece of History teaching that must be kept at all cost !
Never ceases to amaze me that such high quality documentary work can be made by two guy. You've even inspired me to do my own! Thanks TIK you're a legend!!
Edit: Two guys, Gigz is also a legend
Finally, finished up this video. I appreciate the in-depth analysis of this battle showing that the results were due more to British missteps than the brilliance of Rommel.
A masterful presentation. You have achieved legendary status - CONGRATULATIONS!
TiK, I believe this might be your best work. Excellent use of maps, well researched, and an excellent presentation. This along with your all encompassing Stalingrad series are now your benchmark.
This battle reminds me a lot of General Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson’s Shenandoah Valley campaign in 1862. Jackson faced overwhelming forces as well and was also able to concentrate his forces against piecemeal Union forces. Jackson’s victory made him very well known on both sides as well as internationally and gave his infantry the nickname foot cavalry due to how much ground they covered in a very short period of time. I’ve heard that Rommel studied Jackson’s tactics at some point but I’ve never seen anything to authenticate that. But his actions at Gazala seem to mirror what Jackson did 80 years earlier in Virginia.
FABULOUS! I WAS DELAYING A BIT TO MAKE TIME TO WATCH IT IN A SINGLE SITTING AND IT WAS A VERY SATISFYING SITTING. MAPS WERE AWESOME AND SO IS YOUR NARRATION. GREAT JOB!
Very interesting video tik, thanks. The incompetence of the British officers at times was really mind boggling.
I have seen all of your Battlestom videos (actually I think I have seen all of your videos) multiple times, but this has to be the best. Perfect balance between analysis and the battle map and the opinions are clear, which are yours and which are from others and from what sources! I also would like to say that the arguments of your own opinions, were very convincing.
Good job and keep it going! Can't wait for the next one!
What is the point of even deploying Recon Troops if you are unwilling to listen to them?
"Sir, I see German tanks advancing to our position!"
"These are not the droids... I mean *tanks* you are looking for"
Might as well stay at home and drink tea...
Finally, a history channel with videos that aren't montages of film footage taken out of context
I really like the fluid nature of the blobby divisions that you represent. It makes a division seem more like a conglomeration of many pieces, which it is, instead of a monolith.
The whole map and animations are just beautiful in this one.
Fantastic work! Although I think that Rommel was a great commander, not just "not terrible." He was awesome, for many reasons.
Yes yes, Rommel was reckless. He could have truly benefited from a competent staff officer to plan these operations by the book as a starting point. Then Rommel could lead from the front and take decisive action at crucial moments. His own planning efforts were poor.
Having said that, he does deserve credit for his actions during the battle. The man led a supply column himself, under British fire to 21st Pz as it was running out of supply. Then he stayed at the front and suffered with his men as supplies continued to run out. He was clear eyed enough to see that surrender was a day away unless supplies arrived. One suspects his men held out and maintained the will to fight just that little bit longer because they knew Rommel was there. In their minds, they must have thought, the crazy fucker has really ran our asses into a crack this time, but he's here among us, suffering too, and he'll figure something out, because he has before. It's probably partly for the same reason that the supplies made it through the minefield. Men who believed in their commander's ability to pull their bacon out of the fire, braved minefields to move supplies to the front. Rarely has one man had the chance to make such a difference in battles as Rommel did here, because his men had confidence in his ability to lead. And when the opportunities arose, did her ever lead them! During the crucial attack, the man led a platoon into combat. Crazy reckless restless fucker!
This is the fact. By the book, he was not even an above average commander. Yet when chaos reigned, because the British couldn't get their act together, the restlessness and personal bravery to be at the front and DO SOMETHING could be decisive. In battles where one corps fought another across an entire theatre of war, Rommel was incredible.
I finally got around to watch this whole documentary. Outstanding as always.
22:00 In the map, the islands of Rhodes and of the Dodecaneso, were Italians, not germans. The Kingdom of Italy had control of the area since the war with the Ottoman empire in 1912.
This is the most comprehensive and understandable explanation of the battle I have seen,outstanding piece of work sir.
Late to the party. Had to watch it over three evenings in hourly installments due to work commitments. Talk about triumph of the will to switch off and go to bed! Brilliant stuff Tik!. I believe this is the first of your planned longer formats? Really worth the wait and the longer format works well imho. Learned a great deal here. Thanks as ever
I'm only seeing it today. At almost 3 hours it is something you need to see by making time for it, and I only have found that time today.
@@ChaptermasterPedroKantor-kv5yw Yes. Ideally I'd have watched it in one sitting. Enjoy, excellent work from Tik as ever.
Wow, another defete snached from the jaws of victory.
I've learned so much about various campaigns and battles, amazing & marvellously informative.
TIK, your efforts are much appreciated.
The 7th Brigade, 1st Free French and 4th South African Armoured Cars were by far the most effective Allied forces in this battle
Couldn't agree more. Not all SAF units copied Pienaar & the SAF Arm. Cars had a well respected campaign, along with the Free French. Not forgetting the tragic story of the SAF 5th Battalion, wiped out, but found later, dead, but all facing the enemy & manning their guns (during Op Crusader)
I started watching last night i couldnt stop watching and had to forcd myself to stop on the morning of June 5th just to get some sleep so i wasnt tired for work this Morning. Definitely your best battlestorm yet!!
Wow thanks! Sorry for keeping you up so late 😂
i think you are judging Rommel too harshly.
ppl say he got lucky, but you could say he created those lucky situations by moving with confidence.
the genius of the Blitzkrieg WAS recklessness at the right moment to expose the slow adaption rate of the enemy to new circumstances.
also, fog of war was a thing back then.
believe in the effup was the motto. if you press the enemy enough he will effup by miscommunication or indecisiveness.
yeah i also notice he just saying that Rommel was just a normal commander like he didn't turn the battle of north Africa in axis favor and push the whole British army toward Egypt after they win against Italy he also always giving excuses to the defeats of the British divisions unlike the axis divisions just saying oh Rommel win by luck he didn't even mention that he made a victory while attacking an army outnumbered his army
@@GOLDEN-sm3wr But then despite having overwhelming numerical superiority for a while, and enough supplies, Rommel still failed to take Egypt.
@@lyndoncmp5751 Rommel had supply issues, the British didnt. To sum it all up.
TIK Well done! I like your style and keep it this way no fancy stuff needed. Thank You
Excellent job! So packed with great information, I’m getting ready to watch again and again.,,
Awesome! Thank you! Glad you enjoyed it
Had run out of tv shows and docos to watch and then to the rescue!! Well done TIK
Cannot wait to get into this TIK. From a viewer perspective, this is amazing! Really hope it gives you a batter worklife balance than Stalingrad did!
Hope you enjoy it! Considering I just did an all-nighter to get this out, I'm not so sure about the worklife balance... But yes, I've been trying to have more breaks.
TIK, congratulations on BATTLESTORM GAZALLA! Incredible details, well done maps. Very well scripts. Thank you very much!
It's amazing to think that a single British Infantry brigade (with some additional loose elements) was in a position where they nearly ended the war in North Africa.
TIK another brilliant work. I have Pitts' books and with your use of maps and dialogue bringing to life this amazing story, you are the best history teacher, I have ever had. Thanks again.
Messervy was captured by Germans more times than Chuikov almost died at Stalingrad :D
Thank you TIK! This is an excellent documentary. And nearly 3h long, with a breathtaking story, full of careful research and analysis, quite an achievement.
48:13 parisienne ligne de métro 6 station Bir Hakeim commemorates that. Lots of touristes and French of différents origines go though to Eiffel Tower without knowing signification of Bir Hakeim
Fantastic upload, thank you - probably THE best work you give us here, in the last 2 years ! Thank you.
This video makes the obscure Messervy into a meme. How many times can a man get captured in a single battle?
He almost got captured in 1944 by the Japanese in the Battle for the Admin Box when his division HQ was overrun.
@@ChaptermasterPedroKantor-kv5yw Again how ha Messervy never been meme'd before?
@@dangerousidiot1111 Maybe because we had like dozens of episodes with Chuikov's crazy escapades and we only get 1 movie length episode with Messervy? Its as youtuber Nerdrotic says about weekly episodic television vs. the Netflix binge model. Binge is fun but talk about your show dies down within a few weeks after release. Whereas weekly gets you more exposure over time, more talk, more watercooler moments. Stalingrad was the weekly model, Gazala is Netflix binge. And that is why Chuikov will be with us for a long time and Messervy not.
Very well made Tik! Glad to see you back with battlestorm! :) Keep it up, at a level that you are comfortable with ! :)
Comment on the Desert Air Force at 1:19. The Spitfires sent were not 'additional', they were, incredibly, the first Spitfires sent to the desert, not arriving until August 1942. The Spitfire also sat out the fall of Singapore earlier in the year. The squadrons were held back in England to conduct useless 'rhubarb' operations that lost many planes and pilots while achieving precisely nothing (the loss rate to the two German jadgeschwader in France were, at times, around 20-1 against). Yes, even more incompetence at high levels.
really enjoyed this, started watching not realizing it was nearly 3 hours long but watched the lot :-)
Bloody marvelous!! I've been waiting on this one. Thanks for posting it TiK. Cheers from Tennessee
Fantastic again, thankyou TIK! Thoroughly enjoyable and educational!!
It's not an easy task to hold viewers' attention for three hours but you really pulled it off. Although there was a mountain of detail I felt that I could follow the events of the narrative. The maps did much to make sense of it all.
Thank you, that's great feedback! And yes, the maps help a lot, which is why I think people struggle to fully comprehend the battles in the history books as there are never enough maps. I obviously have a lot of books, but I think there's a future for history in video format. I just wish more historians realised this.
It's been up a little over a day and I've watched it three times. This is definitely rewatchable content because sometimes I miss the little jokes, and I'm still getting more out of it. Great work!
Wow that was an epic and amazing video on the battle of gazala.
Glad you liked it!
@@TheImperatorKnight liked it I enjoyed it.
It speaks very well of the British and commonwealth soldiers that with the command of their units not functioning the soldiers fought to keep the enemy back , regardless of the insanity of the fight .
As a American and a retired Colonel of Engineers I was fascinated and horrified how their was such dysfunction at the field grade and general officer level. To me this debacle was allowed to happen by Auchinlek and by Churchill. Churchill's actions bring in mind Gallipoli and the chase of the Goeben in WWI. Auchinlek appears to me not willing to break any eggs to get things done.
And Rommel appears content to break and fry every egg he can get his hands on to win.
First of all, Awesome video!! Congratulations TIK History!!
Now to the point: It seems there are clear discrepances among authors about the role played by Italian 101st "Trieste" Motorized Division at the beginning of the Battle of Gazala. Raymond Cartier in his already outdated book "Second World War" (original in French) states that the "Trieste" division lost contact with the rest of Axis mobile forces in the 1st night of the operation, due to a mistake in navigation in the desert and ended up smashing into the British line of mine fields. This video, at the beginning seems to be in line with that version.
But other accounts of the battle (my apologies, I don't remember author names in this case) state that "Trieste" division was ordered by Rommel to go exactly where It went in order to open a corridor in the British mine fields, just south from the southernmost British "box" (north from Bir-Hacheim) with the purpose of later using it to resupply the rest of Axis mobile divisions. So "Trieste" was acting in accordance to the plan from the very beginning. This video states that "Trieste" was somehow "lost" for like 2 or 3 days, but later "Trieste" division reappears doing exactly what Rommel was in desperate need of being done, i.e., openning a corridor through the British mine fields.
Any clarification on this point?
Binging now, dude you really are my favorite on YT
Glorious work Mr. Imperial Knight!
Enjoying it to the full, brming with detailed context, fast paced sprinkled with some dry humour, excellent.
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