h*tler's Disastrous Desert w*r (2021)

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h*tler's Disastrous Desert w*r (2021)

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NARRATOR: November 1942.

An armada of 200 British

and American ships appears off

the coast of North Africa.

Operation Torch

is about to begin.

Right before the eyes

of the local people,

100,000 men pour onto the beaches of

Morocco and Algeria.

(g*nf*re)

It is this singular theater,

North Africa, that

between 1940 and 1943

was written a famous chapter of

the Second World w*r:

The Desert w*r.

(gusting winds)

Why have the great

powers come to fight in

the challenging desert

conditions of North Africa,

so far from the

epicenter of the World w*r?

And how, there in the

furnace of the desert,

will the allies manage to inflict one of

the first major setbacks

on the forces of the Reich?

The Desert w*r, the

w*r that nobody wanted,

was to turn the

World w*r upside down.

(theme music playing)

(cheering)

(cheering)

NARRATOR: It all begins with a big

gamble by a little dictator

who dreams of greatness:

Benito Mussolini.

(cheering)

He proclaims,

"Italy is in truth a prisoner

of the Mediterranean."

(cheering)

Il Duce wants to restore the

splendors of the Roman Empire.

He dreams of controlling

the Mediterranean Sea,

and expanding his

empire into Africa.

Mussolini is suffocating

in an Africa dominated by

the old imperial powers,

France and the United Kingdom.

The modesty of his own

empire is a very sore point.

In the east, it

controls only Somalia,

Ethiopia and Eritrea.

In the north, Libya was

conquered by iron and blood.

Italy's victory was won back in 1912by

means of multiple massacres and abuses.

(expl*si*n)

In summer 1940,

World w*r II

sets Europe on fire.

After taking over

a part of Europe,

the Third Reich troops

overrun France in a few weeks.

(sirens blaring)

England, under siege,

fears succumbing to

the n*zi thr*at as well.

German and Italians,

united under the Axis banner,

are in a position of strength.

It's a chance that Il Duce

doesn't intend to pass up on.

He wants to see the

old colonial powers

that dominate Africa driven out.

Italy's time has come.

From Libya, he orders

his troops to enter Egypt,

a kingdom controlled

by Great Britain.

(rapid g*nf*re)

A force of 80,000 men

advances about 60 miles

into Egyptian territory.

The Italian generals

are hesitant.

In their eyes, their

army is under-equipped,

and not ready for

such an adventure.

Winston Churchill doesn't

want to let go of Egypt.

Not at any price.

Ever since France surrendered,

the Reich has been

extending its grip on Europe.

For the British Prime Minister,

another defeat

would be unacceptable.

Especially since the Luftwaffe

is relentlessly

pounding England.

Churchill knows that Britain's

salvation depends more than

ever on the

resources of its Empire.

(cheering)

The Suez Canal belongs to Egypt.

For London, it is a vital

artery for transporting

its raw materials.

(boat horn wailing)

For Churchill, it's a

very serious situation.

So the old bulldog sounds

the alarm and mobilizes all

the Commonwealth's resources.

(overlapping chatter)

NARRATOR: Thousands of Australian,

New Zealand and South African soldiers

flock to Cairo

and join the British.

These men left their families

and their jobs to come and

fight in the desert sands.

(expl*si*n)

(expl*si*n)

(expl*si*n)

In December, the

British go on the att*ck.

To their great surprise,

it's like a stroll in the park.

The Italians are disorganized,

and have retreated

500 miles back into Libya.

The British even take Tobruk,

a highly strategic port.

His Majesty's generals know

that in these desert lands,

he who controls

the ports, is master.

In a matter of just a few weeks,

Commonwealth troops have

won an outright victory.

At the beginning of 1941,

they occupy eastern Libya.

(cheering)

And the Muslim population

celebrates its liberators.

(cheering)

It has not forgotten

the 100,000 deaths

the Italian conquest

was responsible for.

(cheering)

The Arabs and the British

even come to an agreement.

Thousands of Libyans accept

to fight for Great Britain.

(overlapping chatter)

NARRATOR: Churchill

promises them independence

once victory is achieved.

It's a good way to undermine

the influence of Rome.

Il Duce was yearning for glory,

but now reaps nothing

but shameful defeat.

He leaves 400 tanks

and 130,000 prisons behind

on the b*ttlefield.

Mussolini wanted to

impose his law in Africa.

Now he has to call for help.

(overlapping chatter)

NARRATOR: By the

beginning of 1941,

h*tler has turned

his gaze to the east.

Along with his generals,

he's devoting himself

to his great project,

Operation Barbarossa,

the conquest of

the Soviet Union.

In his eyes, his victory

will be sealed out there

on the Russian Steppes.

Mussolini, devastated, knows

that his timing is not good.

But he needs his ally's help

if he's not to

lose Libya entirely.

Such a humiliation

would ruin his reputation.

On the strategic plan,

h*tler considers North Africa

as a secondary

theater of operations.

But he fears that a weakened

Mussoliniwill lose his grip on power.

The fall of Il Duce would

thr*aten the security of

the southern flank of

his European fortress.

He agrees to help his ally,

but on his terms.

Any German

intervention must not,

under any circumstances,

disrupt its

operation in the east,

which is expected to be

launched in just a few months.

(speaking in native language)

NARRATOR: The Fuhrer sends only a

smallexpeditionary force to Mussolini's rescue.

The Afrika Korps has only

45,000 men and 174 tanks.

It lands in Tripoli, the

capital of the Italian colony.

Its mission is a limited one,

to help the Italians

recapture eastern Libya,

and to protect

it from a British onslaught.



But the real game changer

is having General Rommel at

the head of those troops.

At 49, Rommel is

young for a general,

but he's the Fuhrer's favorite.

He arrives in Tripoli,

trailing clouds of glory

from the French campaign.

Officially, Rommel is

under Italian command,

but he's ambitious,

and has no intention of

playing a supporting role.

In Africa,

Rommel dreams of glory,

even if it means

disobeying his superiors.



NARRATOR: The Afrika Korps

has only been present on

the African soil

for a few weeks.

But Rommel is already impatient.

On March 24, 1941,

without even warning

either Rome or Berlin,

he suddenly launches

an att*ck eastward.

His intentions are clear.

"My first objective," he says,

"Is the recapture

of eastern Libya.

My second, northern Egypt

and the Suez Canal."

It's a grand plan.

From the land of the Pharaohs,

he can head for

Baku in the Caucasus and

get his hands on

the precious oil resources.

Then, he can rendezvous

with the Wehrmacht troops

to strike at Russia.

It's pure megalomania,

and far from anything his

leaders are expecting of him.

But his troops are all for it,

for the Afrika Korps is

partly made up of volunteers,

all of them deeply

committed to the Reich.

North Africa provides

Rommel with the ideal setting

to rehearse it all.

On these vast expanses,

his Panzers can

get up to full speed.

His technique is to

push straight ahead,

and not worry about

his flanks or his rear.

He counts on the

element of surprise and

on his own intuition,

and that's what's earned

him the Fuhrer's admiration.

(rapid g*nf*re)

(rapid g*nf*re)

(explosions)

Rommel's sudden offensive

comesas a shock to the British.

The Germans aren't the same

thing as the Italians at all.

Faced with such a

formidable adversary,

the worrying weaknesses of the

British army start to emerge.

The men are under-trained and

their equipment is dilapidated.

As the British doctor

James Graham observes,

the Afrika Korps

is wreaking havoc.

"It was a blitz.

We were devoured.

The whole area was

marked by smoking remains,

bodies scattered around.

Some living, some not.

Our principal task

was to relieve suffering.

There was little

room for sentiment.

Interment being carried

out near the fatal spot by

a man's comrades,

enemy permitting."

Noticing that the

British are retreating,

Rommel decides to advance

towards Egypt heading deeper

into the desert.

He's well aware that

he's now disobeying orders.

To his wife Lucie, he confesses,

"My darling Lucie,

we are attacking

with remarkable success.

I've taken the

risk of moving forward,

despite all previous

orders and instructions,

in order to seize

such a great opportunity."

Rommel's goal is Tobruk.

It's his modest aim to bring

it down in a matter of days.

He considers it

a mere formality.

To avoid disaster, the British retreat

to the Egyptian border.

They abandon all the territory

they've taken in Libya with

the exception of Tobruk.

Tobruk is defended by

25,000 Commonwealth soldiers.

Their supplies arrive by sea.

The British will never leave this

deep-water port to Rommel.

If it were to

fall into his hands,

he'd use it to

supply his own troops,

which would allow them

to advance into Egypt.

On the front line, life's

hard when you're under siege.

The men shelter from the

bombingin flea-infested holes.

"Like rats," as the

German radio propaganda

is always saying.

So they defiantly refer to

themselves as the Tobruk Rats.

(sirens blaring)

They are daily raided.

(sirens blaring)

(rapid g*nf*re)

(expl*si*n)

For the time being,

Tobruk's still holding on.

(airplane rumbling)

NARRATOR: Rommel

is struggling.

He spends his days visiting

his units scattered around

Tobruk and on

the Egyptian border.

Unlike the

officers of the Wehrmacht,

he despises state duties.

(explosions)

He wants to see the

battles from the front lines.

(explosions)

(explosions)

And tirelessly keeps ordering

his men to break through,

whatever the cost.

(g*nf*re)

German Lieutenant

Robert Witzke is fighting on

the front line.

He writes to his wife,

"Dear Inge, every

day there are att*cks.

(rapid g*nf*re)

We can only ask ourselves

every day who is still alive

from the comrades.

Many are dead, but

even more are wounded.

Inge, keep thinking of me."

After a 15 day siege,

Rommel has consumed an astronomical

amount of amm*nit*on and

the fuel is about to run out.

It doesn't matter, to a

battalion of machine g*ns,

he declares, "We will be in

Cairo in eight days from now.

Pass the word around."

Rommel is waging an overly

ambitious w*r without a care

for one decisive element:

fuel and supplies.

Yet delivering the 53,000 tons

of monthly supplies that his

relentless att*cks

require is a daunting task,

because the Axis supply

lines are long and dangerous.

In the Mediterranean, the

British are tracking down

Italian cargo ships

trying to reach Tripoli,

the only port controlled

by the Afrika Korps.

All the same, 80% of supplies

are still getting through.

Petrol, water, food, amm*nit*on.

Every day once unloaded,

the supplies have

to reach the front.

It's quite a challenge.

It takes 14 days to travel

the 750 miles from Tripoli

to the front.

It's a real trial for the men.

Ironically, the trucks consume

half of the petrol they carry.

Rommel is impatient with all

these logistical constraints.

He exhausts his troops

and fails to take Tobruk.

His attitude costs

the lives of 53 officers,

and 1,200 men.

The Afrika Korps

is very weakened,

but holds its ground.

It's far from its bases though,

and difficult to refuel.

It is dangerously exposed.

A counter att*ck by the

enemy might well destroy it.

(gusting winds)

The Khamsin, the burning wind that can

blow for long days at a time,

heralds the beginning

of the strong heat.

(gusting winds)

From May to October,

it is impossible to fight

between 12:00 am and 4:00 pm.

In daytime, the

heat is overwhelming.

At night, the cold is glacial.

Lieutenant Witzke

survived the hell of Tobruk,

and now he's

facing fresh ordeals.

In June 1941, he

confides to his wife,

"Hot is not the word.

For the past ten days,

we've had 58 to

60 degrees in the sun.

I've already lost 20 pounds.

If they don't

get us out of here,

it'll drive us all mad."

"The biggest problem was water,"

laments another soldier.

"Drinking, always drinking.

That was the be-all and end-all of

our desert existence."

(flies buzzing)

The soldiers are also confronted with

the scourge of the desert:

the flies.

(flies buzzing)

Shortly after sunrise,

they arrive in hordes,

attracted by human sweat,

the only moisture available

in these arid lands.

(flies buzzing)

There is no way to escape them.

(flies buzzing)

Rommel's men find no

comfort in the food.

It's insufficient in

both quality and quantity.

They try to improve the

quality of their meals by

buying from the Bedouins.

This trade may improve

Robert Witzke's daily life,

but above all, it

confirms his loathsome racism.

"These dogs are so wily, that

they ask a fortune for an egg.

We all reckon they're spies."

"If you look at

these filthy bastards,

then there is only one thing,

away with the riff raff."



NARRATOR: At the height of summer,

in the Libyan desert,

the crushing heat

immobilizes the armies.

While the men of the

Afrika Korps suffer from

the lack of supplies, opposite,

in the British units camped

on the Egyptian border,

it's depression

that's tormenting the men.

They have been living in

isolation in the desert for

eight months now and have

no way to distract themselves.

Overwhelmed with boredom, a

soldier writes in his diary,

"Every day it's

the same old thing.

The desert's everywhere.

It drains your spirit.

There's nothing here to look at,

nothing to listen to.

The only thing that keeps us holding on

is thoughts of home."

(overlapping chatter)

NARRATOR: Churchill

is exasperated.

Everything suggests that his

worn-out troops are incapable

of b*ating Rommel.

So the Prime Minister decides

to send the reinforcements

that have been called up over the months

from all over the Empire.

From now on, North Africa has

become a major theater of w*r.

Indians, Africans, Maltese,

Jews from Palestine,

Mauritians.

In the autumn of 1941

more than 150,000 men

come to swell the British ranks.

(train horn blaring)

They are joined

by the Free French.

Responding to the call

of General De Gaulle,

they will carry on the fight

to restore France's honor.

By engaging his massive forces,

Churchill forces

h*tler to raise the stakes.

(explosions)

(rapid g*nf*re)

(expl*si*n)

Nearly 2,000 miles from

the burning sands of Africa,

the great offensive

against the USSR is entering

a decisive phase.

At temperatures of

minus 22 Fahrenheit

the Wehrmacht are

trying to take Moscow.

At the very moment when the eastis

taking up all his attention however,

h*tler decides to send

reinforcements to his protg.

He can't afford to

lose North Africa.

By entrusting command to

an uncontrollable general,

the Fuhrer has turned

the desert into a trap,

because Rommel hasn't

given up on his fantasies.

On the contrary.

In January 1942, h*tler's

promised reinforcements

finally arrive.

That's barely enough to

solve his logistical problems,

but just enough to let him

dream of a new raid on Cairo.

Once again, to

everyone's surprise,

Rommel resumes his mad dash.

Overexcited, he

writes to his wife Lucie,

"Dear Lucie, I have several

plans in mind that I would

never dare talk to my

officers about at the moment

or they might think

I was going crazy.

You know me, it's

the wee small hours that

my best plans come to me."

There is no

guarantee that the British

will be able to stop it.

Their new General,

Claude Auchinleck,

has a clear superiority

in both men and equipment.

But Churchill's not

betting on the right horse.

Auchinleck does not know

how to surround himself with

the right people.

He had served for a

long time in India,

and has chosen his

subordinates poorly.

For months, he sends hundreds

of tanks to the slaughterhouse

by charging

frontal assaults worthy of

old fashioned cavalry charges.

In May 1942, Rommel

tries an unprecedented and

very risky maneuver to put

his enemy out of the game.

He decides to bypass the

defense line protecting Tobruk

in order to catch him

from behind and crush him.

But in a remote area,

he comes across an

unexpected obstacle,

Bir Hakeim.

It's a position that

the Free French under

General Koenig

have been holding onto.

Just a handful of them:

3,700 men.

(explosions)

Despite the deluge of fire unleashed by

the Panzers and Stukas,

they managed, by

their heroic resistance,

to block the

Afrika Korps for 15 days.

(overlapping chatter)

NARRATOR: The British,

grateful, salute the exploit.

Thanks to the precious hours

gained by De Gaulle's men,

Auchinleck's 8th Army,

in the midst of a debacle,

has avoided being surrounded.

It withdraws its troops behind

the Egyptian border but,

for the second time,

abandons the east

of Libya to the enemy.



MAN: Here is Tobruk.

NARRATOR: Rommel has

achieved his main objective,

to capture the port of Tobruk.

(singing in native language)

NARRATOR: Robert Witzke

plays a leading role

in this victory.

"Our battalion," he exults,

"Had once again

the honorable task

to form the lead.

Jesus Christ, Tobruk is ours!

It's still hard to believe."

Two days after his triumph,

Robert Witzke is

severely injured.

He is evacuated to Germany.

MAN: Marshal Rommel

inspects positions in the city's harbor.

There are still dense

clouds of smoke above Tobruk.

REPORTER (over radio):

Marshal Rommel...

NARRATOR: German w*r

reporters followed Rommel's

every step during the

last phase of the battle.

Their images give his

exploit a global impact.



The Desert Fox myth has begun.

(overlapping chatter)

NARRATOR: And while the cameras are

all focused on Rommel,

they're careful not

to film the vendetta of

the Italian settles.

The Arab people

chose the British camp.

(overlapping chatter)

They pay the price.

The looting and the

murders are multiplying.

One Italian rejoices,

"No sooner had

the English fled than

any Arab we found got

a b*llet in the head or

a grenade in the stomach.

Our soldiers are here now,

finishing the job."

(overlapping chatter)

NARRATOR: There's v*olence too

against Libya's 30,000 Jews,

whether they supported

the British or not.

Fascist racial laws have

previously been applied only

mildly to these

Italian citizens,

but m*llitary setbacks

provoke a radicalization of

the fascist regime.

Il Duce decides to intern

all the Jews in the region.

Entire families

are being arrested,

loaded into trucks and dumped

in concentration camps set up

on the edge of the desert.

The worst of these

detention camps is in Giado,

150 miles south of Tripoli.

About 3,000 prisoners

will be held there,

a quarter of them will

die of undernourishment

and ill treatment.

The disaster of Tobruk

strikes Churchill as he meets

Franklin Roosevelt

at the White House.

"It is one of the heaviest blows I can

recall during the w*r.

Defeat is one thing,

disgrace is another."

Churchill's way of

ruling is openly questioned.

The British don't trust theirPrime

Minister to lead the w*r anymore.

As Mussolini did with h*tler,

Churchill must now win

the support of his ally.

His political

survival is at stake.

In meeting after meeting,

he harasses Roosevelt to

help him annihilate

the Afrika Korps.

His plan is to

land in North Africa.

Like h*tler, the

American generals have

no desire to

intervene in this region.

They believe that

to defeat Germany,

you have to strike at

its heart, in Europe.

So they're planning a

landing on the French coast

that could happen in

barely a year's time.

(overlapping chatter)

NARRATOR: To

convince his host,

Churchill insists that it would

beharmful to remain inactive for a year,

with public opinion

in the U.S. impatient

and hungry for victories.

It's an argument that doesn't leavethe

American President indifferent,

and it's true that he

is soon to face elections.

The Desert Fox

ignores all this scheming.

At the end of June 1942, he

decides to advance into Egypt,

with h*tler's

blessing this time.

The Fuhrer now considers

the conquest of Egypt as a

historic opportunity to

bring down the British Empire.

El Alamein is a small railway station

on the Egyptian coast.

Nobody could guess this lost place would

soon go down in history.

Yet this is where

the British will change

the course of the w*r.

Claude Auchinleck has chosen

this position so as not to be

surrounded again

by the Desert Fox.

It has impassable

obstacles on every side.

The sea to the north,

a vast area of

soft sand to the south.

In July 1942, Rommel

launches what he hopes would

be a decisive

offensive at El Alamein.

(explosions)

NARRATOR: As soon as the German offensive

was launched at El Alamein,

things go very wrong

for the British soldiers.

Over the past year, they

suffered defeat after defeat,

despite their superior numbers.

The inept strategies

of their leaders and

their fear of Rommel

have undermined their resolve.

(overlapping chatter)

NARRATOR: In

his field hospital,

Dr. James Graham is

seeing a flood of soldiers,

all wounded and unable

to continue the fight.

(distant g*nf*re)

He discovers that some would

rather mutilate themselves

than go back to the front line.

"The tricks used was to

break up a r*fle cartridge and

swallow the expl*sive,

a poison for the liver.

After a few weeks in hospital,

there's a chance you might

get a non-combatant job."

In the summer of 1942,

Auchinleck sees his men

surrender in

droves to the enemy.

Such defeatism is unacceptable.

He calls for the

reintroduction of

the death penalty for deserters.

Auchinleck managed to contain the

Axisoffensive but falls into disgrace.

He is held responsible for

the collapse of

his troops' morale.

Devoured by anxiety,

Winston Churchill rushes to

Cairo in early August.

He abruptly dismisses

Claude Auchinleck.

(overlapping chatter)

NARRATOR: To replace him,

he opts for

General Bernard Montgomery.

Churchill finds him proud,

but he chooses Montgomerybecause

he has a precious quality:

an immense self confidence that

he is able to communicate

to those around him.

James Graham is attached to

Montgomery's headquarters.

He sees him scrambling

to cure the ailments that

plague his men.

"Montgomery is out every day.

He goes assiduously

around all the units to

introduce himself

to the soldiers.

Never before has a

commander done that."

Montgomery's message to his

troops is simple but firm,

"The defense of Egypt

lies here at Alamein.

Here we will stand and fight.

There will be no

further withdrawal."

(overlapping chatter)

NARRATOR: Clearly under him,

they'll not give an

inch of ground to Rommel.

James Graham confirms it.

"That was enough to

earn their loyalty.

Everyone likes to be

on the winning side."

(cheering)

Strategically, Montgomery is the

absolute opposite of Rommel.

The British strategist,

for his part, likes to

prepare his plans meticulously.

At the end of August when

Rommel goes on the offensive,

Montgomery is waiting for him.

Rather than gamble on an

unlikely decisive battle,

Montgomery decides to

wear his opponent out.

He does, after all, have a

clear material superiority.

"My plan is to contain the enemy's

tanks while we carry out

a methodical destruction

of his defensive system.

The enemy will be

cut from his supplies."

(rapid g*nf*re)

Montgomery's target

is Rommel's weak point:

his petrol supply convoys.

(rapid g*nf*re)

Werner Mork drives a supply truck

for the Afrika Korps.

He suffers another air att*ck

that will mark him for

the rest of his life.

"The att*ck only

lasted a few moments.

I'm pretty messed up."

(rapid g*nf*re)

"Ever since, I've been overwhelmed by

a mindless sense of panic.

It's with me now, the

w*r in all its cruelty,

all its horror."

Montgomery's wear and

tear strategy has paid off.

(explosions)

After a month of fighting,

the Afrika Korps has only

a few days of fuel left.

On October 27, 1942,

the Desert Fox is

finally done for.

(radio static)

British intelligence

intercepts a German message

indicating the imminent

arrival of two Italian tankers

in the port of Tobruk.

As they prepare to drop anchor,

the ships are sunk by

Royal Air Force bombers.

(expl*si*n)

So, due to a lack of fuel,

Rommel can simply no

longer afford to act.

Rommel has suffered a

terrible defeat at El Alamein.

He knows that this will ruin

his Fuhrer's

ambitions in Africa.

It's a broken man

who writes to his wife.

"God only knows whether I

will survive this defeat.

If I never return,

I would like from

the bottom of my heart,

to thank you and our

son for all the love and

happiness you

have brought me."

(applause)

The victory at El Alamein

marks a turning point

in World w*r II.

CHURCHILL (over speaker):

Rommel's army has been defeated.

NARRATOR: The British Prime Minister

doesn't hide his pleasure.

CHURCHILL (over speaker):

Now, this is not the end.

It is not even the

beginning of the end.

But it is perhaps the

end of the beginning.

(laughter)

(bells ringing)

NARRATOR: Churchill gloats.

He knows that the Reich's days

in Africa are now numbered.

American troops have just

disembarked in North Africa.

On the beaches of

Morocco and Algeria,

two French colonies.

Despite opposition

from his staff,

Roosevelt yields to Churchill.

The U.S. President wants to

win the midterm elections.

He has promised his public an easy victory

on the African continent.

Initially scheduled

to last six weeks,

Operation Torch, the

epilogue of the Desert w*r,

will in fact last

for six long months.

The British and American

forces and Montgomery's army

have planned to

meet up in Tunisia.

It's an ideal

springboard to hit Europe.

A project h*tler wants

to prevent by all means.

The Fuhrer had hesitated

to support the Afrika Korps.

He now sends heavy

reinforcements to Tunisia,

and even transfers some of

the Luftwaffe bombers from

the Russian front.

The ferocity of the fighting

dullsthe Americans' enthusiasm,

especially since

their first clash with

the Wehrmacht in

February 1943 in Kasserine.

It was a disaster.

(expl*si*n)

But that terrible baptism of

fire has toughened them up.

Now the battle-hardened

American forces can

join up with

Montgomery's British army.

(overlapping chatter)

NARRATOR: With

overwhelming superiority now,

the British and Americans

launch their final offensive

in central Tunisia.

The British enter Tunis,

while the Americans

enter Bizerte.

The Axis troops, crammed

into their final refuge,

surrender unconditionally.

The Allies take

275,000 prisoners,

far more than the 90,000 men

takenat the fall of Stalingrad.

These thousands of soldiers

won't now be able to repel

the allies at the

Normandy landing.

(cheering)

And so ends the Desert w*r.

It's a victory that drives

the Germans out of Africa.

Now the Allies are

ready to engage in

the great confrontation

in western Europe.

Along with Montgomery,

they've tamed modern warfare.

(cheering)

The lesson has been learned,

by the leaders as

well as their men,

at the cost of

unspeakable suffering.

(cheering)

The people

celebrate their liberators,

but all the

jubilation is ambiguous.

The Allied victory may have rid Africa

of the plague of Nazism,

but despite all the promises,

it has not broken the

chains of colonialism.

The Desert w*r will lead

to the defeat of the Reich.

It will also herald a new era:

that of the liberation

of colonized nation.

(cheering)
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