![]() ![]() Gasped one British general: “These last three days have been fantastic, unbelievable. German motorized elements simply decorated their vehicles with white flags and drove into the Allied lines. Audacious columns streamed to the coast from all directions, cutting the enemy into hundreds of hopeless, helpless units. When LIFE’s correspondent Will Lang entered Tunis’ Majestic Hotel to register for a room, German officers were still drinking at the bar.Īllied pressure never relaxed. Thousands of German officers and soldiers were obliviously promenading the streets of Tunis when four British armored cars rolled into the city on May 7. The Allies’ final push caught the Germans completely off base. ![]() ![]() Among the Allies, the British were the hardest hit, with more than 200,000 men killed, wounded, captured or missing. Close to 100,000 troops were killed, the grim total split almost evenly between the Allies (British, American and Free French, for the most part) and Axis powers (Italian, German and Vichy French). The number of dead, wounded and missing in North Africa didn’t come close to the millions lost in Europe and the Pacific during the war but neither side got off easy. Here, presents a series of photos-many of which never ran in LIFE magazine-made in Tunisia by photographer Eliot Elisofon in 1943, as the campaign was nearing its end. That they were fought not in Europe or in the Pacific, but instead in the deserts and towns of North Africa, might come as something of a shock to people who never knew in the first place that Allied and Axis troops fought and fought for years in Libya, Tunisia, Algeria and other countries along the northern rim of the African continent. Some World War II battlefields have been immortalized in histories, memoirs, novels and films that the names alone can conjure stark and stirring images for even the most casual history buff.īut how many of us recognize names like Sidi Bou Zid? El Guettar? Seden? Wadi Akarit? To a lesser or greater degree, these and other battles with now long-forgotten names also helped to determine the course and the outcome of the Second World War. ![]()
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