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When the United States
enters the war,
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it's understood that a second front
is needed to defeat Nazi Germany.
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The Red Army and Soviet people
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have taken the brunt
of the Nazi onslaught
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for nearly a year, and now
Soviet leader Joseph Stalin
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demands that the Western Allies
do their part.
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The Allies disagree where to attack.
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American military leaders
want to invade France,
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the most direct route to Berlin.
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But Churchill and his generals,
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still haunted
by the horrible cost of World War I,
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are reluctant to invade Europe
before they're ready.
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And so the decision
is made to attack the Germans
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in North Africa, in an invasion
codenamed Operation Torch.
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The Americans,
inexperienced and untested,
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are about to battle the Wehrmacht
for the very first time.
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All wars changed the world,
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but none of them changed the world
like the Second World War did.
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Japan's on the march.
Germany is on the march.
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No-one can imagine the nightmare
they're about to unleash:
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the most destructive war
in human history.
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Suddenly the world
is turned upside down,
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and all hell is let loose.
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The West is stunned
by the speed of the advance.
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You get the Allies,
led by the Big Three:
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Roosevelt, Churchill, Stalin:
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men who were dealing with
immensely complicated questions.
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It's the biggest military
operation of human history.
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The Allies have to come together,
not just militarily,
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but industrial scale.
it's a global perspective.
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They have to fight
in every climate,
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from the Arctic
to the jungles of the Pacific,
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to the deserts of Africa,
and the depths of the ocean.
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But there was
no certainty of victory.
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It was going to be
a horrific bloodbath.
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We see humans
at their absolute worst,
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how they treat other human beings.
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And we see them at their best,
willing to give their lives,
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that others might live.
- World War II was a struggle
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in which there could be
one victor and one vanquished.
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The British base
of Gibraltar
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has long guarded the opening
to the Mediterranean.
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Steady as a rock,
for nearly 240 years,
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Gibraltar has stood sentinel
above the harbor,
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watching over
the Mediterranean fleet.
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The strongest fortress
in the world.
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On November 5, 1942,
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Lieutenant General
Dwight D. Eisenhower
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lands at the military airstrip.
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He's arrived to take command
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of a joint U.S.-British
ground operation
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in North Africa, codenamed Torch.
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This campaign will eventually
open a second front
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against German and Italian forces
already fighting in Africa.
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Operation Torch
is an extremely complex landing.
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In all,
we're gonna be depositing a force
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of around 100,000 troops.
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And in order to deliver that force,
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we've got to use 300 merchantmen
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guarded by roughly 300 warships.
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Three Allied task forces
are involved
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in the complex manoeuvre.
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The East and Centrer Forces
will land in Algiers and Oran.
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The West Task Force,
sailing from America,
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will land on the beaches
of Casablanca.
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They have to rendezvous at sea,
hundreds of miles away,
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then carry out
simultaneous landings
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across nearly 1,000 miles
of North African Coast.
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Nothing remotely like it
had ever been carried out before.
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Eisenhower is hand-picked
by President Roosevelt
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to lead the alliance,
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to the surprise of many American
and British military commanders.
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He's been a high-level staff officer
for years,
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but this
will be his first wartime operation.
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Dwight Eisenhower,
a year ago, had been a colonel.
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And now, he's been advanced
to lieutenant general.
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Eisenhower
has never held a combat command.
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He was not actively involved
in World War I.
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Never seen the Somme.
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Never seen Passchendaele.
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Never seen a man die
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in their arms in combat.
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Who is this man, Eisenhower?
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Eisenhower is wickedly competitive
and really intelligent.
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And the other thing is,
he's not an ego.
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He's pretty humble.
He gets along with people,
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which is utterly important
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when you think about
the centre of gravity
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for the Allies is the alliance.
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From day one,
in Eisenhower's new role.
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as Supreme Commander, he has
a pile of problems on his plate.
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He has to run
this gigantic operation.
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Nothing on this scale
has ever been done before.
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He has to keep it secret.
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Eisenhower
will need to co-ordinate
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the American and British commands
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and synchronise
all elements of Torch.
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Ultimately,
every aspect of the operation,
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including preparing unproven
American soldiers for combat,
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is on his shoulders.
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One of the reasons
they've chosen North Africa
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as a theatre for American troops
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is because it will give them
an opportunity of blooding them,
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they're inexperienced, most of them
hadn't even seen combat,
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against
an incredibly formidable foe.
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The German troops
were battle-hardened.
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They'd been in the field now
for two full years.
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They'd conquered
various kinds of climes,
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various kinds of terrain,
various kinds of enemies.
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They'd beaten them all.
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By the summer of 1942,
the Nazi empire is huge.
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It goes all the way
from the western coast of France
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to well inside the borders
of the Soviet Union.
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All continental Europe, effectively,
is controlled by the Nazis.
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The Germans
control most of Europe,
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but that's not the sum total
of Hitler's ambitions.
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Germany has to be
a global empire,
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he says many times.
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So now, the focus turns
outside of Europe to North Africa.
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German and Italian forces
are already fighting the British
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in North Africa,
threatening the Suez Canal,
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the vital supply line
between Britain and India.
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British imperial strategists
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have always been obsessed
with the Suez Canal,
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the great artery
of the British Empire.
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It joins Britain
and its empire in the East,
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particularly India,
jewel of the British Empire.
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The danger is that
the Axis forces move
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from there to control of
the oil fields of the Middle East.
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And if all of that happens,
they're gonna sever the supply lines
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to the rest of the Empire.
Winston Churchill
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also wants to get the Americans
in the fight against the Axis
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as soon as possible.
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Roosevelt believed
that American troops.
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need to be in the field
against the Axis powers
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in 1942.
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The people needed to feel
that we were striking back.
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We need to figure out
how to fight a modern battle.
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and this is where
the army is gonna use
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as its proving ground.
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There are valuable lessons
to be learned.
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North Africa
might be a place to do it.
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But there's
an immediate challenge.
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The future landing spots
on North Africa's coast
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are on Vichy French territory.
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The French empire
is the second largest in the world,
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behind only that of Great Britain,
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with immense manpower
and resources at its disposal.
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The French
still control Morocco,
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Algeria, and Tunisia.
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After France surrenders
to Germany in 1940,
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the country is split in two.
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The southern half of France
is ruled by the Vichy government,
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which collaborates
with Nazi Germany.
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It's led by World War I hero
Marshal Philippe Petain.
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Eisenhower is anxious.
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Will the French in North Africa
resist the American landing?
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No-one's clear
exactly how many soldiers
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and what military assets
the French have in North Africa.
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What they do know
is that the French have
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a lot of very modern warships there.
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They also have
about 120,000 soldiers,
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although no-one knows
exactly how well trained,
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or, most crucially, their morale,
what they're inclined to do.
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American diplomats
in North Africa believe
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the French are unlikely
to resist the invasion,
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but cannot guarantee it.
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Eisenhower has been
sending messages
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to various Vichy governors
in North Africa,
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hoping for co-operation.
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On November 7,
over 600 ships gather
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at their meeting points out at sea.
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The warning order
is flashed to the waiting ships.
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H-Hour is confirmed: November 8.
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The Allies are ready to land.
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On November 7th,
more than 100,000 Allied troops
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are waiting
off the coast of North Africa.
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There's risk.
Amphibious operations require
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detailed, advance preparation.
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What are the tides?
What's the footing gonna be?
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How close can landing craft get?
Are there mines?
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Are there underwater obstacles?
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The first wave of landing craft
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from East and Center Task forces
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set off for the beaches
at Algiers and Oran.
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Shortly after, fighter support
takes off from Gibraltar.
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Ike Eisenhower must have
been incredibly nervous,
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and was nervous, we know,
from his naval aide,
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who writes that Ike
is like a "cat on bricks."
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Even though the weather
was kind of bad the night before,
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when they actually started
unloading their landing craft
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and moving those craft
up to the beaches,
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the surf is low enough
that they're able
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to get initial landing forces
onto the beaches successfully.
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The first reports
Eisenhower receives
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from the landing craft
on the beaches are encouraging,
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but when large Allied warships
enter the ports of Algiers and Oran,
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the French open fire.
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The Allies keep moving.
and overcome the French
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a day later.
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On the Atlantic landing point
at Casablanca,
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it's a different story.
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Eisenhower entrusts this force
to his old friend,
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Major General George S. Patton Jr.
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George Patton is a commander
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who believes
in aggressive leadership.
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He is
a fast-talking disciplinarian,
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a character easily recognisable
to the average soldier.
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As the Western Task Force
nears shore,
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Patton delivers a speech
to his troops
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over each ship's
public address system.
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Soldiers and sailors,
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it is not known
whether the French African Army
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will contest our landing,
but all resistance,
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by whomever offered,
must be destroyed.
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In the early morning,
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Allied warships
enter the harbour at Casablanca.
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The French do as they've been
instructed to do. They resist.
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This was an invading force,
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and the French
open fire on the ships.
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It's the last thing in the world
that an amphibious operation needs.
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Just a couple of heavy shells
can destroy a landing.
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Despite French resistance,
Americans continue their attack,
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from the air as well as by sea.
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The result is actually
the largest naval battle
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in the Atlantic during the war.
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Despite Eisenhower's
diplomatic efforts,
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the troop landings
face heavy French opposition.
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00:14:14,520 --> 00:14:16,800
Nobody on the American
or British side,
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least of all Eisenhower,
wants American forces
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fighting French forces,
and does not want that to go on
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for any extended period of time.
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00:14:23,880 --> 00:14:26,600
Eisenhower
writes what he calls
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the 'Worries of a Commander.'
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00:14:30,200 --> 00:14:32,480
"No Frenchman
immediately available,
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no matter how friendly toward us,
seems able to stop the fighting."
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Then, with Operation Torch
in danger of failing,
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the Allies contact
a senior French military officer
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with the power
to provide a solution.
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00:14:49,600 --> 00:14:53,280
It just so happens
that the commander in chief
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of French forces,
Admiral Francois Darlan,
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is in North Africa at this time,
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visiting his son, who has polio.
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00:15:00,440 --> 00:15:03,640
Although Darlan
is a key Vichy collaborator,
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he is the only man
with the authority
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to stop the French counter-attack.
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Darlan had been
a deep collaborator
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with the Germans and the Nazi
presence in Vichy, France.
249
00:15:16,480 --> 00:15:19,800
And as distasteful
as a figure he is,
250
00:15:19,960 --> 00:15:23,880
he holds the key to stopping
Vichy French resistance
251
00:15:24,040 --> 00:15:27,360
in North Africa.
Eisenhower authorises
252
00:15:27,520 --> 00:15:29,360
negotiations with Darlan.
253
00:15:36,720 --> 00:15:41,120
The Allies will put him
in charge of French North Africa
254
00:15:41,280 --> 00:15:44,360
if he agrees to an armistice.
255
00:15:44,520 --> 00:15:47,880
It's a dirty deal.
It's an unpleasant one.
256
00:15:48,040 --> 00:15:49,080
It's a nasty one.
257
00:15:49,240 --> 00:15:51,480
American journalists
were appalled by it.
258
00:15:51,640 --> 00:15:56,800
That evening,
Darlan orders a general ceasefire
259
00:15:56,960 --> 00:16:00,920
and tells all French forces
to join the Allies.
260
00:16:01,080 --> 00:16:05,160
And so on November 11th,
in the port city of Casablanca,
261
00:16:05,320 --> 00:16:06,880
French guns fall silent.
262
00:16:11,440 --> 00:16:13,080
Algeria and French Morocco
263
00:16:13,240 --> 00:16:16,160
have joined hands with the Allies
against Germany and Italy.
264
00:16:16,320 --> 00:16:21,200
This has immensely eased our
difficulties in French North Africa.
265
00:16:21,360 --> 00:16:24,000
Eisenhower thought
it would save lives on both sides,
266
00:16:24,160 --> 00:16:27,200
and it would allow them to get on
to the military mission at hand.
267
00:16:28,480 --> 00:16:31,520
The Allies have landed
in North Africa
268
00:16:31,680 --> 00:16:35,120
and have convinced the French
to fight alongside them.
269
00:16:37,520 --> 00:16:40,280
Now, as they push east,
270
00:16:40,440 --> 00:16:44,880
they will face tough,
battle-hardened Axis forces.
271
00:16:58,160 --> 00:17:00,880
After the Allied landings,
272
00:17:01,040 --> 00:17:04,600
Eisenhower moves his combined force
across the North African desert.
273
00:17:08,800 --> 00:17:11,720
The Allied plan is not simply
to approach from the west:
274
00:17:11,880 --> 00:17:15,880
their strategy is more ambitious.
275
00:17:16,040 --> 00:17:17,840
The ultimate goal, if Torch works,
276
00:17:18,000 --> 00:17:20,240
is the United States
and the British that land.
277
00:17:20,400 --> 00:17:23,120
in the western part of Africa
will drive to the east.
278
00:17:24,200 --> 00:17:27,640
The British that are in the east,
in Egypt, will drive to the west,
279
00:17:27,800 --> 00:17:30,320
and they will capture
a German-Italian army
280
00:17:30,480 --> 00:17:32,000
in between those two pincers.
281
00:17:33,600 --> 00:17:35,920
The British
fighting in the east,
282
00:17:36,080 --> 00:17:38,920
The Eighth Army, has been
battling the Afrika Korps...
283
00:17:42,600 --> 00:17:46,720
...led by the Desert Fox,
Erwin Rommel.
284
00:17:46,880 --> 00:17:51,200
He had a mystique about him.
He had a World War I reputation.
285
00:17:51,360 --> 00:17:53,320
He was a feared leader.
286
00:17:53,480 --> 00:17:56,440
He had
the fingertip feel of a battle.
287
00:17:57,920 --> 00:18:00,200
For months,
Rommel has pursued the British
288
00:18:00,360 --> 00:18:04,040
through Libya into Egypt,
capturing vital supplies
289
00:18:04,200 --> 00:18:06,360
and threatening the Suez Canal.
290
00:18:09,360 --> 00:18:14,360
The Afrika Korps' success has left
Prime Minister Winston Churchill
291
00:18:14,520 --> 00:18:17,000
depressed
and politically vulnerable.
292
00:18:17,880 --> 00:18:20,880
Churchill looks like
he's lost his touch.
293
00:18:21,040 --> 00:18:25,280
He faces two no confidence motions
in Parliament,
294
00:18:25,440 --> 00:18:28,400
both of which he wins.
But as one Labour MP says, "Well,
295
00:18:28,560 --> 00:18:30,760
you win the debates,
but lose the battles."
296
00:18:30,920 --> 00:18:34,400
Winston Churchill
is in need of victories.
297
00:18:36,080 --> 00:18:38,560
For Churchill
and for Operation Torch,
298
00:18:38,720 --> 00:18:40,840
one battle in North Africa
will be critical.
299
00:18:42,960 --> 00:18:44,840
Just weeks
before the Allied landings,
300
00:18:45,000 --> 00:18:50,040
the British Eighth Army,
led by General Bernard Montgomery,
301
00:18:50,200 --> 00:18:53,320
prepares his troops
at a little-known railway junction
302
00:18:53,480 --> 00:18:55,400
called El Alamein.
303
00:18:57,480 --> 00:19:02,400
From here, Montgomery plans to
launch a massive counter-offensive
304
00:19:02,560 --> 00:19:04,600
against the Afrika Korps.
305
00:19:06,440 --> 00:19:09,200
El Alamein shouldn't be viewed
in isolation.
306
00:19:09,360 --> 00:19:11,880
It's part of a broader Allied plan:
307
00:19:12,040 --> 00:19:15,520
Montgomery's Eighth Army
attacking Rommel from the east,
308
00:19:15,680 --> 00:19:19,000
and meanwhile
a vast amphibious landing
309
00:19:19,160 --> 00:19:22,400
in the western half
of North Africa, Operation Torch,
310
00:19:22,560 --> 00:19:25,040
converging on Rommel
from two directions
311
00:19:25,200 --> 00:19:29,600
and eventually giving him
an insoluble operational dilemma,
312
00:19:29,760 --> 00:19:31,520
trying to maintain himself
313
00:19:31,680 --> 00:19:36,120
against not just one.
but two superior enemies.
314
00:19:36,280 --> 00:19:37,920
Montgomery is reinforced
315
00:19:38,080 --> 00:19:40,880
with American
Sherman and Grant tanks,
316
00:19:41,040 --> 00:19:45,040
plus troops from India,
New Zealand, South Africa,
317
00:19:45,200 --> 00:19:47,120
and the rest of
the British Commonwealth.
318
00:19:47,280 --> 00:19:51,600
At last, Montgomery, who has
been fighting the Wehrmacht
319
00:19:51,760 --> 00:19:53,280
since the invasion of France,
320
00:19:53,440 --> 00:19:58,680
has the opportunity to go on
the offensive against Rommel.
321
00:20:11,320 --> 00:20:14,320
On the night of October 23, 1942,
322
00:20:14,480 --> 00:20:17,560
Montgomery opens the battle
with a massive barrage.
323
00:20:20,440 --> 00:20:23,680
Montgomery knows
he's got to proceed step by step,
324
00:20:23,840 --> 00:20:26,160
1,000 yards by 1,000 yards,
325
00:20:26,320 --> 00:20:28,320
get the infantry in,
326
00:20:28,480 --> 00:20:32,600
clear the minefield.
open the way for the tanks,
327
00:20:32,760 --> 00:20:34,000
hold the ground.
328
00:20:41,240 --> 00:20:44,320
Rommel fights back,
but he's hampered by lack of fuel.
329
00:20:48,080 --> 00:20:52,320
After days of fighting,
the Eighth Army prevails.
330
00:20:55,000 --> 00:20:57,040
By the 11th day of the fighting,
331
00:20:57,200 --> 00:20:59,600
Montgomery's superior numbers
and material
332
00:20:59,760 --> 00:21:01,800
finally begin to take effect.
333
00:21:03,400 --> 00:21:05,920
The British infantry
and the New Zealand infantry
334
00:21:06,080 --> 00:21:08,120
break their way
through the German lines
335
00:21:08,280 --> 00:21:09,960
and open things up for the armour.
336
00:21:13,440 --> 00:21:16,560
Tens of thousands of men,
thousands of tanks,
337
00:21:16,720 --> 00:21:20,080
hundreds of heavy artillery,.
heavy losses on both sides.
338
00:21:23,960 --> 00:21:28,040
Inevitably, the better supplied
and armed force win out,
339
00:21:28,200 --> 00:21:31,440
and that's
Montgomery's Eighth Army.
340
00:21:33,200 --> 00:21:35,480
Winston Churchill
is absolutely thrilled.
341
00:21:35,640 --> 00:21:38,080
This is years of planning
and preparation. At lunch
342
00:21:38,240 --> 00:21:40,800
with the King and Queen,
he says, "I bring you victory."
343
00:21:40,960 --> 00:21:43,800
They think he's gone mad.
They haven't had victories in years.
344
00:21:43,960 --> 00:21:47,280
In London,
at the Lord Mayor's Luncheon,
345
00:21:47,440 --> 00:21:50,560
Winston Churchill frames
the victory at El Alamein
346
00:21:50,720 --> 00:21:53,120
and puts it into context.
347
00:21:53,280 --> 00:21:55,400
This is not the end.
348
00:21:55,560 --> 00:22:00,280
No, it is not even
the beginning of the end.
349
00:22:00,440 --> 00:22:03,280
But it is perhaps
the end of the beginning.
350
00:22:10,320 --> 00:22:12,360
Montgomery's win here
351
00:22:12,520 --> 00:22:16,280
is one of the most significant
British victories of the entire war.
352
00:22:16,440 --> 00:22:18,920
Montgomery has beaten Rommel
at El Alamein,
353
00:22:19,080 --> 00:22:21,320
and Rommel is retreating
as fast as he can.
354
00:22:22,720 --> 00:22:27,520
The critical pincer plan,
the ultimate goal of Torch,
355
00:22:27,680 --> 00:22:28,920
is underway.
356
00:22:29,080 --> 00:22:32,080
Montgomery certainly
undertakes an epic pursuit
357
00:22:32,240 --> 00:22:36,080
from El Alamein over the wire,
the Egyptian-Libyan border,
358
00:22:36,240 --> 00:22:39,080
and now heading towards Tripoli.
359
00:22:40,120 --> 00:22:41,840
In the west,
360
00:22:42,000 --> 00:22:45,040
Eisenhower's troops
have moved hundreds of miles.
361
00:22:48,400 --> 00:22:51,520
Three weeks after landing,
they're only 12 miles outside Tunis,
362
00:22:51,680 --> 00:22:52,840
the capital of Tunisia.
363
00:22:53,000 --> 00:22:55,480
When he learns this,
364
00:22:55,640 --> 00:23:00,160
Adolf Hitler
is determined to stop the Allies.
365
00:23:00,320 --> 00:23:04,080
The war is not going the way
he thought it was going to go,
366
00:23:04,240 --> 00:23:06,600
and now all of a sudden,
you've got these Allies
367
00:23:06,760 --> 00:23:10,400
messing around in North Africa.
This isn't supposed to happen.
368
00:23:14,320 --> 00:23:18,480
Hitler sends reinforcements,
including an entire Panzer division,
369
00:23:18,640 --> 00:23:20,640
to the ports and air bases
around Tunis.
370
00:23:23,280 --> 00:23:26,000
Combined with
Rommel's Afrika Korps,
371
00:23:26,160 --> 00:23:29,080
there are now 100,000
German and Italian troops
372
00:23:29,240 --> 00:23:30,280
on the continent.
373
00:23:32,120 --> 00:23:35,360
No-one in either camp
had ever envisioned
374
00:23:35,520 --> 00:23:39,880
a gigantic continental battle
being fought for Tunisia.
375
00:23:40,040 --> 00:23:42,120
But that's where
the fortunes of war
376
00:23:42,280 --> 00:23:43,960
have brought the two adversaries.
377
00:23:53,560 --> 00:23:55,880
Thanksgiving, 1942.
378
00:23:58,480 --> 00:24:01,960
Near Tunis, American tanks
clash with German Panzers
379
00:24:02,120 --> 00:24:04,080
for the first time.
380
00:24:04,240 --> 00:24:07,400
The tank is the modern
manifestation of land warfare.
381
00:24:07,560 --> 00:24:09,480
The idea that tanks,
American tanks
382
00:24:09,640 --> 00:24:10,920
are fighting German tanks,
383
00:24:11,080 --> 00:24:13,760
this is what FDR said would happen.
We're now pushing back
384
00:24:13,920 --> 00:24:17,800
against Germany.
- This is the actual battlefield,
385
00:24:17,960 --> 00:24:20,760
Germans on the left,
Americans on the right.
386
00:24:20,920 --> 00:24:23,120
P-38s move ahead
of the advancing forces.
387
00:24:26,520 --> 00:24:28,720
These scenes were photographed
388
00:24:28,880 --> 00:24:30,760
from a hill
overlooking the battlefield.
389
00:24:30,920 --> 00:24:34,000
All logic would tell you this is
gonna go badly for the Americans,
390
00:24:34,160 --> 00:24:35,840
with no experience of warfare.
391
00:24:36,000 --> 00:24:38,760
The Germans
are hardened combat veterans.
392
00:24:38,920 --> 00:24:41,040
A lot of them
have fought in Western Europe,
393
00:24:41,200 --> 00:24:45,200
in all those victorious battles.
- These are German Mark IV tanks.
394
00:24:45,360 --> 00:24:48,000
These are Panzer IVs
with 75-millimetre guns,
395
00:24:48,160 --> 00:24:50,760
very effective.
And up against them
396
00:24:50,920 --> 00:24:53,400
you've got
relatively light American tanks.
397
00:24:53,560 --> 00:24:57,000
They've only got 37-millimetre guns,
and the skin of the armour
398
00:24:57,160 --> 00:24:58,240
isn't very effective.
399
00:25:00,040 --> 00:25:02,960
The skirmish
begins badly for the Americans,
400
00:25:03,120 --> 00:25:05,080
who are supported by British troops.
401
00:25:05,240 --> 00:25:07,160
A British ammunition lorry is hit.
402
00:25:09,160 --> 00:25:11,960
At the start of it,
they get knocked back.
403
00:25:12,120 --> 00:25:13,960
A whole troop of tanks
gets wiped out.
404
00:25:15,360 --> 00:25:18,560
But the Allies
have a second company of tanks
405
00:25:18,720 --> 00:25:19,760
in reserve.
406
00:25:20,720 --> 00:25:23,160
They can fire into the position
of. the Germa armour
407
00:25:23,320 --> 00:25:25,880
that is very weak,
which is really around the belt,
408
00:25:26,040 --> 00:25:28,400
and also at the back of the tank.
And they knock out,
409
00:25:28,560 --> 00:25:31,560
in the space of a few minutes,
eight German Panzers.
410
00:25:31,720 --> 00:25:34,200
Watch the tank
in the centre of the picture.
411
00:25:36,320 --> 00:25:39,080
A blast on the left of the screen
has struck the centre tank.
412
00:25:39,240 --> 00:25:41,040
It spins around, disabled.
413
00:25:43,240 --> 00:25:44,800
There it goes.
414
00:25:44,960 --> 00:25:46,840
The Panzers now withdraw.
415
00:25:47,000 --> 00:25:50,560
In this
very first tank-to-tank skirmish,
416
00:25:50,720 --> 00:25:53,160
the Americans
beat back the Germans.
417
00:25:53,320 --> 00:25:55,760
Black smoke indicates the end.
418
00:25:58,960 --> 00:26:00,560
But the offensive stalls.
419
00:26:03,000 --> 00:26:07,000
Reinforcements sent by Hitler
pummel them from land and air,
420
00:26:07,160 --> 00:26:09,720
while the winter rains
impede movement.
421
00:26:11,040 --> 00:26:12,880
Just before Christmas,
422
00:26:13,040 --> 00:26:15,320
General Eisenhower visits the front
423
00:26:15,480 --> 00:26:17,520
to consult with his troops
and commanders.
424
00:26:17,680 --> 00:26:21,000
He concludes that there's no chance
of reaching Tunis
425
00:26:21,160 --> 00:26:24,560
in the current conditions,
and calls off the advance.
426
00:26:25,480 --> 00:26:27,480
A U.S. Army report
from this era says,
427
00:26:27,640 --> 00:26:30,680
"At present, the Germans are
making war better than we are."
428
00:26:39,760 --> 00:26:40,960
In the new year,
429
00:26:41,120 --> 00:26:43,560
President Roosevelt
and Prime Minister Churchill
430
00:26:43,720 --> 00:26:44,800
meet in Casablanca.
431
00:26:49,520 --> 00:26:51,840
President Roosevelt flies in,
432
00:26:52,000 --> 00:26:55,560
the very first President
to fly while in office.
433
00:27:00,920 --> 00:27:04,280
The codename of Roosevelt's
secret meeting with Churchill
434
00:27:04,440 --> 00:27:08,080
in Casablanca is Don Quixote.
This is the first time
435
00:27:08,240 --> 00:27:12,880
that an American President
has left the U.S. during wartime.
436
00:27:15,600 --> 00:27:17,520
Moving a President
of the United States
437
00:27:17,680 --> 00:27:20,880
and his entourage is always hard.
In this case, they can't send him
438
00:27:21,040 --> 00:27:23,800
by ship across the Atlantic Ocean
because of German U-boats,.
439
00:27:23,960 --> 00:27:27,480
so they send him
on this insane trip by rail
440
00:27:27,640 --> 00:27:29,000
from Washington to Miami,
441
00:27:29,160 --> 00:27:32,240
then by a Clipper flying boat
from Miami to Trinidad,
442
00:27:32,400 --> 00:27:34,360
Trinidad to Brazil,
Brazil to Gambia,
443
00:27:34,520 --> 00:27:35,680
Gambia to Casablanca.
444
00:27:35,840 --> 00:27:40,440
It's an incredibly arduous journey
Roosevelt believed he had to make.
445
00:27:40,600 --> 00:27:44,440
Roosevelt and Churchill
will meet numerous times
446
00:27:44,600 --> 00:27:46,880
throughout the war,
and derive great benefit
447
00:27:47,040 --> 00:27:48,800
from face-to-face meetings.
448
00:27:50,400 --> 00:27:54,480
Churchill can now play the part.
of the great imperial warlord
449
00:27:54,640 --> 00:27:57,280
that, so far, he's been
only through his speeches.
450
00:27:57,440 --> 00:27:58,960
Now he can do it on the ground.
451
00:27:59,120 --> 00:28:00,920
And he does what he does best,
which is,
452
00:28:01,080 --> 00:28:02,760
roll out maps
and talk grand strategy
453
00:28:02,920 --> 00:28:04,120
with the U.S. President.
454
00:28:06,720 --> 00:28:09,800
Over ten days,
the two leaders and their staffs
455
00:28:09,960 --> 00:28:13,680
discuss the progress
of Operation Torch,
456
00:28:13,840 --> 00:28:16,360
and plan the Allies' next steps.
457
00:28:18,600 --> 00:28:20,680
It's really the high water mark
458
00:28:20,840 --> 00:28:25,440
of the Roosevelt-Churchill
relationship. They're statesmen,
459
00:28:25,600 --> 00:28:28,240
moving chess pieces
around on a board.
460
00:28:28,400 --> 00:28:31,720
Just before they leave,
they talk to reporters
461
00:28:31,880 --> 00:28:33,000
from around the world.
462
00:28:33,160 --> 00:28:36,040
The North African conference
is the fourth time
463
00:28:36,200 --> 00:28:38,760
the two great men have met
since the war began.
464
00:28:40,320 --> 00:28:44,240
To the surprise of many,
including Churchill,
465
00:28:44,400 --> 00:28:46,960
Roosevelt
announces a new war aim.
466
00:28:48,000 --> 00:28:49,200
A new phrase was born:
467
00:28:49,360 --> 00:28:52,360
"unconditional surrender"
for the Axis.
468
00:28:52,520 --> 00:28:56,400
'Unconditional surrender'
meant that Nazi Germany
469
00:28:56,560 --> 00:28:57,600
would have to fall.
470
00:28:57,760 --> 00:29:00,880
That did not mean
that Germany had to be destroyed,
471
00:29:01,040 --> 00:29:04,600
but Nazi power had to be smashed.
472
00:29:04,760 --> 00:29:06,640
We would now
call this 'regime change.'
473
00:29:08,080 --> 00:29:11,800
There will be no armistice.
There will be no soft surrender.
474
00:29:11,960 --> 00:29:14,960
There will be no repetition
of World War I.
475
00:29:15,120 --> 00:29:17,440
This is unconditional surrender.
476
00:29:19,080 --> 00:29:23,080
It's quite something.
We're in early 1943,
477
00:29:23,240 --> 00:29:25,240
and it is not at all clear
that the Allies
478
00:29:25,400 --> 00:29:27,240
are even winning the war.
479
00:29:27,400 --> 00:29:30,280
They're having trouble
taking Tunis, which is
480
00:29:30,440 --> 00:29:32,280
a very long way from Berlin.
481
00:29:32,440 --> 00:29:37,080
Yet Roosevelt and Churchill know
that they can produce
482
00:29:37,240 --> 00:29:39,000
more than their adversaries.
483
00:29:39,160 --> 00:29:42,200
And if production
goes as they think it will,
484
00:29:42,360 --> 00:29:45,320
they will be able
to swamp the armies
485
00:29:45,480 --> 00:29:47,880
that the Axis
puts in the field against them.
486
00:29:48,960 --> 00:29:51,160
As the conference ends,
487
00:29:51,320 --> 00:29:54,720
Allied intelligence
reveals Rommel's army,
488
00:29:54,880 --> 00:29:56,400
pursued by Montgomery,
489
00:29:56,560 --> 00:29:59,680
has joined
with Hitler's reinforcements.
490
00:30:03,240 --> 00:30:04,840
But the Americans
and the British
491
00:30:05,000 --> 00:30:06,240
now have them surrounded.
492
00:30:18,560 --> 00:30:21,920
By the end of January, 1943,
493
00:30:22,080 --> 00:30:24,480
the Allies
are finally gaining ground
494
00:30:24,640 --> 00:30:28,000
against the Axis powers
of Germany, Italy, and Japan.
495
00:30:29,640 --> 00:30:34,080
In the Pacific, the Americans
have secured Guadalcanal.
496
00:30:35,000 --> 00:30:37,840
The Allies successfully landed
in the west,
497
00:30:38,000 --> 00:30:41,680
and Montgomery's Eighth Army
has pressed Rommel's Afrika Korps
498
00:30:41,840 --> 00:30:43,480
across a wide front.
499
00:30:54,840 --> 00:31:00,000
The Allies now surround
the Axis army deep inside Tunisia.
500
00:31:01,760 --> 00:31:03,640
But before they can get far,
501
00:31:03,800 --> 00:31:05,760
Rommel plots a counter-offensive.
502
00:31:07,800 --> 00:31:11,560
He's identified a weak point
in the Allied line,
503
00:31:11,720 --> 00:31:13,280
at Kasserine Pass.
504
00:31:14,400 --> 00:31:17,080
Kasserine
is this very narrow pass
505
00:31:17,240 --> 00:31:18,560
only about two miles wide,
506
00:31:18,720 --> 00:31:21,720
and it leads
into the Dorsale Mountains,
507
00:31:21,880 --> 00:31:24,400
the mountain range
in the centre of Tunisia.
508
00:31:24,560 --> 00:31:27,560
You've got heights
on either side of it.
509
00:31:27,720 --> 00:31:31,360
If Rommel can drive
deep enough through Kasserine
510
00:31:31,520 --> 00:31:35,240
and into the rear areas
of the Allied army,
511
00:31:35,400 --> 00:31:37,160
he can possibly
turn things round.
512
00:31:38,560 --> 00:31:41,240
From there,
he'll have all sorts of choices
513
00:31:41,400 --> 00:31:45,000
about what to do next:
overrun Allied supply dumps,
514
00:31:45,160 --> 00:31:48,240
perhaps drive
straight north to the sea
515
00:31:48,400 --> 00:31:50,840
and cut off
the entire Allied force in Tunisia.
516
00:31:52,520 --> 00:31:56,000
There are 30,000
Allied troops in the region,
517
00:31:56,160 --> 00:32:00,960
but the narrow pass itself
is guarded by just 2,000 men,
518
00:32:01,120 --> 00:32:04,640
spread thinly across the terrain.
519
00:32:06,160 --> 00:32:08,080
The Allied troops
in the Kasserine Pass
520
00:32:08,240 --> 00:32:11,800
are the U.S. Second Corps:
infantry, engineers, artillery,
521
00:32:11,960 --> 00:32:14,920
men who, by and large,
are completely inexperienced.
522
00:32:15,080 --> 00:32:18,680
The Allied forces
are distributed and dispersed,
523
00:32:18,840 --> 00:32:20,440
lacking mutual support.
524
00:32:20,600 --> 00:32:24,280
Air support
is not dominant at this point.
525
00:32:30,240 --> 00:32:34,120
On February 19th,
Rommel launches his attack.
526
00:32:35,600 --> 00:32:38,160
Until now, the Americans
have had skirmishes
527
00:32:38,320 --> 00:32:41,760
with the Germans, but haven't faced
a full-scale Panzer assault.
528
00:32:48,160 --> 00:32:51,400
This attack comes in
with heavy artillery,
529
00:32:51,560 --> 00:32:55,840
rapid movement
of German armour,
530
00:32:56,000 --> 00:33:00,000
and effective use of motorised
infantry to clear positions.
531
00:33:02,000 --> 00:33:04,360
The American forces
are caught off-guard.
532
00:33:08,000 --> 00:33:10,600
Not only
is this their first major fight,
533
00:33:10,760 --> 00:33:13,040
but their commander
is far behind the lines
534
00:33:13,200 --> 00:33:15,760
and doesn't communicate
with the front.
535
00:33:15,920 --> 00:33:18,200
The results are devastating.
536
00:33:20,080 --> 00:33:22,480
These troops,
slowly but surely,
537
00:33:22,640 --> 00:33:26,040
are being outgunned,
outmanoeuvered, outfought.
538
00:33:26,920 --> 00:33:29,680
What starts out as a defeat
becomes a bit of a rout.
539
00:33:31,480 --> 00:33:35,000
The Axis now begins
streaming up this pass.
540
00:33:35,160 --> 00:33:36,400
It's just a steamroller.
541
00:33:38,000 --> 00:33:40,440
By the evening
of the second day,
542
00:33:40,600 --> 00:33:43,840
U.S. defences in the pass
have collapsed.
543
00:33:44,000 --> 00:33:49,880
Around 2,500 soldiers are wounded,
another 2,500 taken prisoner.
544
00:33:50,040 --> 00:33:52,640
Others abandon their vehicles
and flee over the hills.
545
00:33:54,720 --> 00:33:59,400
Rommel's plan is working,
but then he pushes too far.
546
00:34:00,720 --> 00:34:04,240
He sends his troops forward,
seeking a way through the mountains
547
00:34:04,400 --> 00:34:08,080
and allowing his supply lines
to get dangerously long.
548
00:34:08,240 --> 00:34:12,160
Rommel might have thought
he had the U.S. Army on the run,
549
00:34:12,320 --> 00:34:14,440
but the momentum
that he had established
550
00:34:14,600 --> 00:34:17,880
from that opening is now
beginning to wear down.
551
00:34:18,040 --> 00:34:21,200
His losses are mounting,
his supplies are running out,
552
00:34:21,360 --> 00:34:23,480
especially
tank ammunition and fuel.
553
00:34:25,080 --> 00:34:26,800
As Rommel weakens,
554
00:34:26,960 --> 00:34:29,680
the U.S. Army
steadies itself and regroups,
555
00:34:29,840 --> 00:34:32,800
blocking Rommel's breakout
with a wall of U.S. artillery
556
00:34:32,960 --> 00:34:33,960
and air support...
557
00:34:44,280 --> 00:34:47,600
...which ultimately
forces Rommel to retreat.
558
00:34:50,120 --> 00:34:53,600
The Americans lose casualties
and POWs taken.
559
00:34:53,760 --> 00:34:56,120
This is a real black eye for them.
560
00:34:57,920 --> 00:35:00,040
It is the punch in the face
561
00:35:00,200 --> 00:35:02,760
that the American doctrine
isn't where it should be.
562
00:35:02,920 --> 00:35:06,240
We aren't fighting the way
we should. We need better training.
563
00:35:06,400 --> 00:35:08,360
We need better leadership.
564
00:35:08,520 --> 00:35:10,520
Kasserine Pass
condemns those weaknesses.
565
00:35:10,680 --> 00:35:14,240
The result of this is gonna be
that Americans become
566
00:35:14,400 --> 00:35:16,240
much more serious
about making sure
567
00:35:16,400 --> 00:35:19,800
their forces remain concentrated,
particularly armoured forces,
568
00:35:19,960 --> 00:35:23,400
that we're not going to allow them
to be doled out in bits and pieces.
569
00:35:25,360 --> 00:35:28,040
General Eisenhower
takes responsibility
570
00:35:28,200 --> 00:35:31,840
for the initial breakdown
at Kasserine Pass, and makes changes
571
00:35:32,000 --> 00:35:35,160
to address logistical
and operational issues.
572
00:35:35,320 --> 00:35:39,840
He also reorganises
the Allied force in North Africa.
573
00:35:40,000 --> 00:35:43,560
His first move is to give
General George Patton
574
00:35:43,720 --> 00:35:46,360
command of the U.S. Second Corps.
575
00:35:46,520 --> 00:35:48,520
Patton's a swashbuckler,
576
00:35:48,680 --> 00:35:50,840
and he's been waiting in the wings,
577
00:35:51,000 --> 00:35:52,120
and now it's his moment.
578
00:35:52,280 --> 00:35:55,400
He's a man who is a strong leader,
579
00:35:55,560 --> 00:35:59,120
and troops
respond to strong leaders.
580
00:35:59,280 --> 00:36:02,040
His subordinate commanders
all know
581
00:36:02,200 --> 00:36:05,280
that he will be on the battlefield,
looking over their shoulders,
582
00:36:05,440 --> 00:36:09,800
and if they are not performing.
up to expectations, they're gone.
583
00:36:09,960 --> 00:36:12,560
He tells his troops, famously,
584
00:36:12,720 --> 00:36:16,680
"You're not all going to be
killed, only about 4% of you."
585
00:36:16,840 --> 00:36:19,040
He reassures them,
you'll probably survive,
586
00:36:19,200 --> 00:36:21,880
but death is going to be
your companion going forward,
587
00:36:22,040 --> 00:36:23,800
and I'm not going to spare you.
588
00:36:23,960 --> 00:36:27,400
We're gonna hit the Germans
face to face and toe to toe.
589
00:36:27,560 --> 00:36:31,600
Eisenhower's troops
are now prepared and in position
590
00:36:31,760 --> 00:36:36,040
to deal a final blow
to the Axis powers in North Africa.
591
00:36:46,120 --> 00:36:50,040
After five months of combat,
the combined Allied troops
592
00:36:50,200 --> 00:36:52,560
have become
an effective fighting force.
593
00:36:54,640 --> 00:36:57,920
General Eisenhower
now marshals these troops
594
00:36:58,080 --> 00:37:01,200
for what he hopes
will be a final confrontation
595
00:37:01,360 --> 00:37:04,760
with Rommel and the Axis.
- The Allied plan
596
00:37:04,920 --> 00:37:07,480
is to bleed Rommel's strength off.
597
00:37:09,000 --> 00:37:12,200
Anytime he faces the British,
theoretically
598
00:37:12,360 --> 00:37:15,160
he can have the Americans
advancing into his rear.
599
00:37:15,320 --> 00:37:17,360
Every time
he turns against the Americans,
600
00:37:17,520 --> 00:37:20,680
he can have Montgomery
advancing into his rear.
601
00:37:25,880 --> 00:37:29,640
On March 20th,
the Allies are ready to attack
602
00:37:29,800 --> 00:37:31,240
in a place called El Guettar.
603
00:37:34,120 --> 00:37:37,880
Patton tells his men,
"We must be eager to kill.
604
00:37:38,040 --> 00:37:41,880
If we fight viciously enough,
we will live to return to our family
605
00:37:42,040 --> 00:37:43,760
as conquering heroes."
606
00:37:45,000 --> 00:37:48,040
The Germans become aware
of that position
607
00:37:48,200 --> 00:37:52,160
and say to themselves,
we think we can eject the Americans
608
00:37:52,320 --> 00:37:54,800
fairly easily. We did it before
at Kasserine, right?
609
00:37:58,320 --> 00:38:01,760
As German Panzers
burst onto the plains at El Guettar
610
00:38:01,920 --> 00:38:04,080
with Stukas plunging down,
611
00:38:04,240 --> 00:38:08,280
Patton deploys U.S. field artillery
and tank destroyers.
612
00:38:12,280 --> 00:38:17,520
Patton is very aware
of how to use armour, infantry,
613
00:38:17,680 --> 00:38:21,480
and artillery all together. And when
the Germans put in that attack,
614
00:38:21,640 --> 00:38:25,720
the Americans greet them with
a true example of combined arms.
615
00:38:28,080 --> 00:38:29,560
They absolutely shellack them.
616
00:38:40,200 --> 00:38:42,480
Having come
right after Kasserine Pass,
617
00:38:42,640 --> 00:38:44,920
it has gone from failure to success.
618
00:38:53,560 --> 00:38:58,000
Over the next month,
the Allies squeeze the Axis armies,
619
00:38:58,160 --> 00:39:01,200
and by early April,
Eisenhower's forces
620
00:39:01,360 --> 00:39:04,760
and Montgomery's Eighth Army
finally join.
621
00:39:04,920 --> 00:39:06,720
Eisenhower rejoices.
622
00:39:08,520 --> 00:39:12,160
"We are at last operating
on a single battle line."
623
00:39:14,160 --> 00:39:16,240
Now the Allies
set their sights on Tunis.
624
00:39:17,440 --> 00:39:20,000
German resistance is ferocious...
625
00:39:20,160 --> 00:39:22,960
Every hill and pass is a struggle.
626
00:39:25,720 --> 00:39:28,320
But gradually,
with concentrated firepower
627
00:39:28,480 --> 00:39:29,600
from two sides,
628
00:39:29,760 --> 00:39:32,880
the Allies continue to move forward.
629
00:39:38,040 --> 00:39:39,520
Almost inch by inch,
630
00:39:39,680 --> 00:39:42,840
the Axis position in Tunisia
shrinks...
631
00:39:44,520 --> 00:39:48,240
...till it's little more than an arc
around the city of Tunis itself.
632
00:39:56,640 --> 00:40:00,720
On May 7,
Allied troops entered Tunis
633
00:40:00,880 --> 00:40:02,800
and the Axis forces surrender.
634
00:40:04,280 --> 00:40:05,840
After the capture of Tunis,
635
00:40:06,000 --> 00:40:08,440
North Africa
is finally free of the Nazis
636
00:40:08,600 --> 00:40:10,320
and their fascist Italian allies.
637
00:40:10,480 --> 00:40:12,880
The North African campaign
is over.
638
00:40:14,680 --> 00:40:18,720
By tens,
by hundreds, by thousands,
639
00:40:18,880 --> 00:40:23,680
they came.
And at the end, 15 full divisions,
640
00:40:23,840 --> 00:40:28,760
266,000 of their best men,
laid down their arms.
641
00:40:30,160 --> 00:40:33,920
Over a quarter of a million
Germans and Italians are captured.
642
00:40:35,880 --> 00:40:39,000
Prisoners
as far as the eye can see.
643
00:40:39,880 --> 00:40:42,920
This is a great moment
for the Allied cause.
644
00:40:43,080 --> 00:40:46,800
There had been one disastrous
encounter with the Germans
645
00:40:46,960 --> 00:40:48,760
after the other
since this war began,
646
00:40:48,920 --> 00:40:52,040
and now I think
everyone on the Allied side,
647
00:40:52,200 --> 00:40:55,040
especially Roosevelt, would say,
the home folks can see
648
00:40:55,200 --> 00:40:58,040
that something
was going right in this war.
649
00:41:06,240 --> 00:41:09,600
Many high-ranking
Axis commanders are captured,
650
00:41:09,760 --> 00:41:15,240
but not Rommel, who has been
recalled to Germany by Adolf Hitler.
651
00:41:17,360 --> 00:41:19,960
The success of Operation Torch,
652
00:41:20,120 --> 00:41:22,880
combined with British victory
at El Alamein,
653
00:41:23,040 --> 00:41:25,560
push the Nazis out of North Africa.
654
00:41:25,720 --> 00:41:27,320
It is the first step
655
00:41:27,480 --> 00:41:30,040
toward Allied victory
over the Third Reich.
656
00:41:30,200 --> 00:41:34,120
To give you a sense of the scale
of the victory in Tunisia,
657
00:41:34,280 --> 00:41:36,840
Churchill orders
the church bells to be rung.
658
00:41:37,000 --> 00:41:39,880
They haven't been rung
during the course of the whole war.
659
00:41:40,040 --> 00:41:43,880
It's an unbelievable victory
for the Allies.
660
00:41:44,040 --> 00:41:46,760
The tide of the war is turning,
661
00:41:46,920 --> 00:41:48,560
but it's unclear what's next.
662
00:41:53,600 --> 00:41:55,280
This great victory
is a monument
663
00:41:55,440 --> 00:41:57,600
to the perfection of co-operation
664
00:41:57,760 --> 00:42:00,880
among the fighting services
of several nations. I know
665
00:42:01,040 --> 00:42:04,200
you would be proud of the way
our own boys, your husbands,
666
00:42:04,360 --> 00:42:08,560
brothers, sons, and sweethearts
have delivered here for you.
667
00:42:13,280 --> 00:42:14,720
Winston Churchill said,
668
00:42:14,880 --> 00:42:17,120
"The only thing worse
than fighting with allies
669
00:42:17,280 --> 00:42:19,440
is fighting without them."
670
00:42:19,600 --> 00:42:24,360
Operation Torch demonstrates
that General Eisenhower
671
00:42:24,520 --> 00:42:28,240
could command the multi-national
coalition of military forces
672
00:42:28,400 --> 00:42:30,200
necessary to topple the Third Reich.
673
00:42:30,360 --> 00:42:33,400
There are many fronts in modern war.
674
00:42:33,560 --> 00:42:35,280
Because of its very nature,
675
00:42:35,440 --> 00:42:40,160
the role of gathering intelligence
is often obscure and misunderstood.
676
00:42:40,320 --> 00:42:43,200
But when it's successful,
it can be decisive.
677
00:42:43,360 --> 00:42:46,600
That's why a small English hamlet,
678
00:42:46,760 --> 00:42:50,600
purposefully located
between Cambridge and Oxford,
679
00:42:50,760 --> 00:42:54,080
becomes a crucial front
in World War II.
56177
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