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Date: Wednesday, 2 July 1941
Place: Halfaya Pass, Sollum, Libya
Photographer: Fritz Sturm
Together with his staff officers, on 2 July 1941 General der
Panzertruppe Erwin Rommel (left, Kommandierender General Deutsches
Afrikakorps) made a visit to the headquarters of I.Bataillon /
Schützen-Regiment 104 / 15.Panzer-Division in the Sollum front, which is
on the border Libya-Egypt. During this visit, in particular "Der
Wüstenfuchs" (The Desert Fox) congratulated the commander of the
battalion, Hauptmann der Reserve Wilhelm Bech (walking at the forefront
with Rommel), who in the battle a month earlier managed to withstand the
British tank forces who were trying to break through the Halfaya Pass
in order to free their comrades who were besieged in Tobruk, in a mass
attack codenamed Operation Battleaxe (15-17 June 1941). For three full
days Bach and his men endured wave after wave of enemy tank attacks,
with only a platoon of Flak 88 cannons as their main weapon. Although
Rommel himself had ordered the Bataillonskommandeur to retreat to a more
adequate defensive location "if possible", Bach interpreted his
commander's last words in the opposite direction: a counterattack that
succeeded in repelling the British troops! For this phenomenal
achievement, Bach - who is a former priest (!) - was awarded the
prestigious Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on July 9, 1941, just a
week after this photo was taken. The Flak 88 itself was originally an
anti-aircraft gun, but it can be just as good when it comes to hitting
tank targets on the ground. BTW, in April 1941 - which was only one
month after Rommel arrived in North Africa - German forces managed to
defeat the invading British army and driven it out of Libya, except for
one stubborn ANZAC garrison which remained in the port city of Tobruk
(despite being besieged by a combined force of Italian and German
Afrikakorps). Over the next year, the re-capture of Tobruk became
Rommel's biggest obsession, because without it all German efforts to
conquer Egypt would be vulnerable. When the port city was finally
occupied in June 1942, a grateful Hitler rewarded Rommel with an
extraordinary promotion to Generalfeldmarschall.
Source:
https://www.bridgemanimages.com/en/search?filter_group=all&filter_region=GBR&filter_text=Erwin%20Rommel