From Publishers Weekly
Operation Torch, the 1942 Allied invasion of North Africa, was the first major Allied offensive of WW II. Gen. Eisenhower, the overall commander, had grave misgivings about the undertaking, fearing the resistance of Vichy French troops ashore to the Anglo-American landings. As things transpired, the Vichy navy nearly ruined the U.S. landings near Casablanca, but the French capitulated within a week. The victorious Allies then turned eastward to try conclusions with Gen. Erwin Rommel and his formidable Afrika Korps in Tunisia. Gelb ( Dunkirk ) has much of interest to say about the thorny interplay between the British and American high commands and the even more difficult relations between Eisenhower and the French leaders (whom he privately called "little, selfish conceited worms"). The GIs in the field failed to win much glory in the North African campaign (one British general dismissed them as "merely a nuisance"), but, as Gelb points out, it was a superb training ground for the subsequent invasion of Sicily. A well-balanced look at one of the most important but often ignored campaigns of WW II. Photos. First serial to Quarterly Journal of Military History.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
The Allies were being beaten on every front in 1942, yet in November the Americans and British invaded French North Africa. Neither the objectives nor even the necessity of Operation Torch were clear: the Americans wanted to win the war in the Pacific first, but Churchill persuaded Roosevelt that the European theater must take precedence. The invasion troops were raw, their leaders inexperienced, and supplies limited. North Africa was finally conquered after a bitter six-month campaign during which the Americans suffered a humiliating defeat at Kasserine Pass. There are many books on the complicated tangle of politics, personalities, and military operations that constitutes Operation Torch, and most only serve to confuse the reader. Gelb ( Dunkirk , LJ 8/89) has succeeded in making the campaign understandable to the lay reader, but it remains a complicated tangle. For libraries with extensive World War II collections.
- Stanley Itkin, Hillside P.L., New Hyde Park, N.Y.Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.