Operation Skorpion
{{Short description|Military operation during the Western Desert Campaign of the Second World War}}
{{Use British English|date=May 2016}}
{{missing information|how many casualties were sustained by German forces during the battle|date=April 2025}}
{{Infobox military conflict
| conflict = Operation Scorpion/{{lang|de|Unternehmen Skorpion}}
| partof = the Western Desert Campaign of the Second World War
| image = File:BattleaxeContestedArea.svg
| alt = A large scale coloured map showing the Egyptian–Libyan border near the coast; dotted lines identify the border and frontier barbed wire fence while black dots represent important places and towns.
| image_upright = 1.0
| caption = The area of fighting from 24 March – 17 June 1941
| date = 26–27 May 1941
| place = Halfaya Pass, Egypt
| coordinates = {{Coord|31|30|N|25|11|E|display=INLINE,title}}
| result = German victory
| territory = Germany re-captured Halfaya Pass
| combatant1 = {{flag|United Kingdom}}
| combatant2 = {{flagicon|Germany|Nazi|}} Germany
| commander1 = William Gott
| commander2 = Maximilian von Herff
| strength1 = Infantry battalion and supporting arms
| strength2 = {{lang|de|Kampfgruppe von Herff}}
| casualties1 = 173 men
12 guns
5 Infantry tanks
| casualties2 =
| campaignbox = {{Campaignbox Western Desert}}
}}
Operation Skorpion ({{lang|de|Unternehmen Skorpion}}) from 26 to 27 May 1941, was a military operation during the Western Desert Campaign of the Second World War. The operation was conducted by Axis forces under the command of Colonel Maximilian von Herff and British forces under Lieutenant-General William "Strafer" Gott. A counter-attack was made on British positions at Halfaya Pass in north-western Egypt, which had been captured during Operation Brevity {{nowrap|(15–16 May).}} {{lang|de|Unternehmen Skorpion}} was the second offensive operation commanded by Rommel in Africa (apart from the Siege of Tobruk).
{{lang|de|Skorpion}} pushed the British out of Halfaya Pass and forced them to retire to the area from Buq Buq to Sofafi. The Germans and Italians fortified the pass and built other strong points back towards Sidi Azeiz as tank killing zones, ready to meet another British attack. The British continued with preparations for Operation Battleaxe (15–17 June) but it was another costly British failure that led to the sacking of General Sir Archibald Wavell, Commander-in-Chief Middle East and other senior officers.
Background
={{lang|de|Unternehmen Sonnenblume}}=
{{main article|Operation Sonnenblume}}
After the British victory over the Italian 10th Army in Operation Compass, {{lang|de|Oberkommando der Wehrmacht}} (OKW, armed forces high command) began {{lang|de|Unternehmen Sonnenblume}} (Operation Sunflower), the dispatch of the {{lang|de|Deutsches Afrika Korps}} (DAK, {{lang|de|Generalleutnant}} Erwin Rommel) to Libya to reinforce the remnants of the 10th Army. Rommel attacked at once, driving the British from Cyrenaica and across the Egyptian border, except for the port of Tobruk, where a nine-month siege began. By 8 April, advanced German units had reached Derna east of the Jebel Akhdar but some units had run out of water and fuel at Tengeder. A column of reconnaissance, anti-tank, machine-gun and artillery units was sent ahead to block the eastern exit from Tobruk and on 10 April, Rommel made the Suez Canal the DAK objective.{{sfn|Playfair|Flynn|Molony|Toomer|2004|pp=35–36}} A break-out from Tobruk was to be prevented and next day the port was invested; Reconnaissance Unit 3 went on to Bardia and a composite force was sent to Sollum, about {{cvt|15|km|order=flip}} into Egypt, to try to reach Mersa Matruh. The improvised Mobile Force (Brigadier William Gott) conducted a delaying-action against the Axis on the frontier around Sollum and Fort Capuzzo and from Halfaya Pass eastwards to Sidi Barrani.{{sfn|Playfair|Flynn|Molony|Toomer|2004|pp=35–36}} The first Italo-German offensive had been an operational success but supply constraints made it impossible to advance further than the Egyptian border. The Axis forces were distracted by the siege of Tobruk, while the British began to rebuild their strength in Egypt.{{sfn|Playfair|Flynn|Molony|Toomer|2004|pp=29–35}}
=Halfaya Pass=
The Western Desert, is about {{cvt|240|mi}} wide, from Mersa Matruh in Egypt to Gazala on the Libyan coast. The Sand Sea {{cvt|150|mi}} inland to the south, marks the limit of the desert, which is widest at Giarabub and Siwa Oasis. In British parlance, the Western Desert came to include eastern Cyrenaica in Libya. From the coast, extending inland lies a raised, flat plain of stony desert about {{cvt|500|ft}} above sea level, {{cvt|200|–|300|km|order=flip}} wide, with the Sand Sea beyond. Westwards from Sofafi in Egypt, there are few places where the escarpment can be traversed north to south by wheeled or tracked vehicles. The Litoranea Balbo (Via Balbia) was the only paved road. Scorpions, vipers and flies populate the region, which is inhabited by a small number of Bedouin nomads.{{sfn|Playfair|Stitt|Molony|Toomer|1957|pp=115–116}} Halfaya Pass is a gap in the escarpment near Sollum, about {{cvt|1|km|order=flip}} inland. In Operation Brevity {{nowrap|(15–16 May),}} British forces attacked through Halfaya Pass, against the desert flank of the Axis forces. The attack was intended to reach Sidi Azeiz, beyond Fort Capuzzo in Libya and destroy any Axis forces met during the advance. The attack was repulsed except at the pass, which was captured by the 2nd Battalion Scots Guards and then garrisoned by the 3rd Battalion Coldstream Guards (Lieutenant-Colonel John Moubray), a squadron of Infantry tanks from the 4th Royal Tank Regiment (4th RTR, Major C. G. Miles), field, anti-tank and anti-aircraft guns, with the 7th Support Group of the 7th Armoured Division on the southern flank.{{sfn|Howard|Sparrow|1951|p=77}}{{sfn|Playfair|Flynn|Molony|Toomer|2004|pp=159–163}}
Prelude
=Operation Brevity=
{{main article|Operation Brevity}}
File:BattleaxeContestedArea.svg
Operation Brevity {{nowrap|(15–16 May)}} was a limited British offensive, planned as a rapid blow against weak Axis front-line forces around Sollum, Fort Capuzzo and Bardia on the Egyptian–Libyan frontier. The port garrison of Tobruk, {{cvt|100|mi}} to the west, had resisted Axis attacks and its Australian and British troops endangered the Axis supply line from Tripoli, which led Rommel to give priority to the siege, leaving the front line thinly held. The British objectives were to capture ground from which to begin an offensive toward Tobruk and to inflict losses on the German and Italian forces. On 15 May, Gott attacked with a mixed infantry and armoured force in three columns.{{sfn|Playfair|Flynn|Molony|Toomer|2004|pp=159–163}}
Halfaya Pass was taken against determined Italian opposition and in Libya, the British captured Fort Capuzzo but German counter-attacks regained the fort during the afternoon, causing many casualties among the defenders. The operation had begun well and had thrown the Axis commanders into confusion but most of its early gains were lost to counter-attacks and with German reinforcements arriving from Tobruk, the operation was called off. Gott became concerned that his forces risked being caught in the open by German tanks and conducted a staged withdrawal to the Halfaya Pass on 16 May.{{sfn|Playfair|Flynn|Molony|Toomer|2004|pp=159–163}}
=Plan=
{{lang|de|Unternehmen Skorpion}} was intended to recapture Halfaya Pass by a demonstration on a wide front, bluffing the British into a withdrawal. On the frontier, {{lang|de|Kampfgruppe von Herff}} ({{lang|de|Oberst}} Maximilian von Herff), included Panzer Regiment 8 and troops from Motorised Infantry Regiment 15, Reconnaissance Battalion 33 and a battalion of Rifle Regiment 104. The panzer regiment had {{nowrap|160 tanks}} but insufficient fuel and only {{nowrap|70 panzers}} were used in the attack. The {{lang|de|Kampfgruppe}} was divided into {{lang|de|Gruppe Wechmar}} on the right, with much of the artillery that was to perform a flanking move to the right towards Deir el Hamra. In the centre, {{lang|de|Gruppe Cramer}} with most of the tanks, was to advance on Sidi Suleiman to the south-west of the pass and on the left (coastal) flank, {{lang|de|Gruppe Bach}} was to advance close to the escarpment against the British infantry positions, where there was bad going for tanks. {{lang|de|Gruppe Knabe}} was held in reserve and if the British stood their ground, {{lang|de|Gruppe Wechmar}} and {{lang|de|Gruppe Cramer}} were to concentrate before attacking.{{sfn|Maughan|1966|pp=274–275}}
Battle
During the evening of 26 May, {{lang|de|Kampfgruppe von Herff}} assembled on the coast at the foot of Halfaya Pass. The {{lang|de|kampfgruppe}} attacked the next morning, intending to bluff the British into retiring from the plateau above the escarpment. A panzer battalion west of Fort Capuzzo manoeuvred as a decoy, to give the British the impression that an outflanking move was under way on the desert flank.{{sfn|Lyman|2009|pp=184–185}}{{sfn|Rommel|1982|p=137}}{{sfn|Playfair|Flynn|Molony|Toomer|2004|p=163}} Only {{lang|de|Gruppe Bach}} encountered opposition and in the afternoon, Herff ordered the tanks of {{lang|de|Gruppe Cramer}} to move northwards to defeat the British at Halfaya. The move took place during the night and at dawn on 27 May, {{lang|de|Gruppe Knabe}} attacked the head of the pass, {{lang|de|Gruppe Bach}} attacked the foot and the panzers appeared at the top of the escarpment and bombarded the coastal plain. The commander of the nine 4th RTR tanks at Halfaya ordered an advance to engage the German tanks and during the morning, Gott authorised a withdrawal. Moubray managed to extricate the battalion, although some Guards were captured at the bottom of the pass by {{lang|de|Gruppe Bach}}.{{sfn|Maughan|1966|p=275}} There were no British forces near enough to reinforce and the pass was re-occupied by Axis troops.{{sfn|Playfair|Flynn|Molony|Toomer|2004|pp=162–163}}
Aftermath
=Analysis=
The Axis victories during Operation Brevity and {{lang|de|Unternehmen Skorpion}} were a consequence of the technical superiority of some German equipment, particularly in anti-tank guns and wireless. German field intelligence gleaned and exploited quickly, tactically useful information from British wireless signals and captured documents. British intelligence had the advantage of Ultra decrypts, particularly from {{lang|de|Luftwaffe}} signals but the time taken to send the information from England to Cairo and then deliver it to the commanders on the frontier, made much of it obsolete, even when it contained useful tactical information. Rommel was able secretly and rapidly to reinforce the frontier posts from Tobruk when Operation Brevity began and then spring the surprise at Halfaya Pass on 27 May.{{sfn|Hinsley|1994|pp=78–79}} (The garrison at Tobruk had made two small raids during Operation Brevity but the commander had not been informed of the operation until 17 May.){{sfn|Harrison|1999|p=135}}
=Casualties=
British casualties were {{nowrap|173 men,}} four 25-pounder field guns, eight 2-pounder anti-tank guns and five Infantry tanks.{{sfn|Playfair|Flynn|Molony|Toomer|2004|p=163}} Herff reported that forty prisoners, nine 25-pounder field guns, seven Matilda tanks and two other tanks had been captured.{{sfn|Lyman|2009|p=185}}
=Tiger Convoy=
On 12 May, the Tiger convoy arrived in Alexandria with {{nowrap|238 tanks}} and {{nowrap|43 Hawker Hurricane}} fighters.{{sfn|Playfair|Flynn|Molony|Toomer|2004|p=118–119}} The tanks included {{nowrap|21 Light Tank Mk VI,}} {{nowrap|82 Cruiser tanks}} (including fifty of the new Crusader tanks) and {{nowrap|135 Infantry tanks.}}{{sfn|Pitt|2001|p=294}} There were delays in unloading the tanks, which also had to be adapted for desert use and Battleaxe was postponed until 10 June.{{sfn|Playfair|Flynn|Molony|Toomer|2004|p=164}} The tanks were intended for the 7th Armoured Division, which had been out of action since February after most of its tanks had been worn out during Operation Compass.{{sfn|Playfair|Stitt|Molony|Toomer|1957|pp=1–2, 32, 163–164}}
Subsequent operations
=Axis defensive preparations=
{{see also|Siege of Tobruk}}
File:IWM-E-6724-Crusader-19411126.jpg
After the re-capture of Halfaya Pass, the Axis forces fortified the Gazala line and the siege lines around Tobruk in Libya. The 5th Light Afrika Division was withdrawn on 8 June, to refit at El Adem near Tobruk and replaced on the frontier with the 15th Panzer Division (Generalmajor Walter Neumann-Silkow), with three Italian infantry battalions and an artillery regiment from the 102nd Motorised Division Trento in support at Sollum, Musaid and Capuzzo. The Axis troops built a defensive line just over the border in Egypt, based on Halfaya Pass, in an arc through Qalala and Hafid Ridge {{cvt|6|mi}} south-west of Fort Capuzzo to Sidi Azeiz.{{sfn|Playfair|Flynn|Molony|Toomer|2004|p=164}}{{sfn|Pitt|2001|p=277}}{{efn|Panzer Regiment 8 (two battalions), Reconnaissance Unit 33, I Battery, Artillery Regiment 33, I Battalion, Motorised Infantry Regiment 104, {{lang|de|Panzerjäger}} (tank hunter) Battalion 33 (twenty-one {{nowrap|37 mm}} and twelve 50 mm PAK 38 anti-tank guns), Motor-cycle Battalion 15, an anti-aircraft battery (with thirteen {{nowrap|88 mm guns}} three Italian infantry battalions and three Italian field artillery batteries).{{sfn|Playfair|Flynn|Molony|Toomer|2004|p=164}}}} Rommel adopted the defensive tactics which had been used to defeat the Axis attack on Tobruk at Ras el Medauar in late April.{{sfn|Harrison|1999|p=135}}
Six strong points were built in which {{nowrap|88 mm}} guns and {{nowrap|50 mm}} anti-tank guns were dug in down to their barrels, camouflaged and organised for all-round defence. Even with a relatively small force on the frontier, supply difficulties made stocking the defences with water, fuel and ammunition difficult. {{lang|de|Hauptmann}} Wilhelm Bach, the commander of the anti-tank unit that contained most of the {{nowrap|13 88 mm guns}} in North Africa, sited five of the {{nowrap|88 mm guns}} and several {{nowrap|50 mm}} anti-tank guns in the new fortifications at Halfaya, held by a battalion of Rifle Regiment 104. Turrets were removed from knocked-out Matildas and dug in; the bottom of the pass was sown with anti-tank and anti-personnel mines.{{sfn|Harrison|1999|p=135}} Four {{nowrap|88 mm}} guns were dug in behind minefields on Hafid Ridge and Sidi Azeiz Ridge covering the Sidi Azeiz crossroads; the last four {{nowrap|88 mm}} guns remained mobile with the 15th Panzer Division.{{sfn|Pitt|2001|p=277}}{{sfn|Lewin|1979|p=69}} The British made preparations for Operation Battleaxe, which was due to begin as soon as tank reinforcements were ready from the Tiger convoy, which had arrived from Britain on 12 May.{{sfn|Playfair|Flynn|Molony|Toomer|2004|pp=162, 164}}
=Operation Battleaxe=
{{main article|Operation Battleaxe}}
File:The British Army in North Africa 1942 E14808.jpg
On 15 June, the Axis garrisons of Halfaya Pass, Bardia, Sollum, Capuzzo and Sidi Aziez were to be destroyed by the Western Desert Force (Lieutenant-General Noel Beresford-Peirse) with the 4th Indian Division, 7th Armoured Division and the 22nd Guards Brigade, which were then to capture the area around Tobruk and El Adem and advance further west to take Derna and Mechili.{{sfn|Pitt|2001|p=295}} Poor British signals security gave Rommel notice of the operation and its course; during the battle, captured documents were exploited.{{sfn|Hinsley|1994|p=79}} The 5th Light Afrika Division was moved to the south of Tobruk, ready for operations in the Sollum area or Tobruk and Rommel ordered a big artillery bombardment of Tobruk, the night before the operation, to prevent the Allied garrison from breaking out.{{sfn|Playfair|Flynn|Molony|Toomer|2004|p=168}}
On 17 June, XIII Corps was ordered to retire before the 22nd Guards Brigade was trapped; by dark, the British had withdrawn to the area of Sidi Barrani–Sofafi and the Axis troops had returned to their positions on the frontier. The British suffered {{nowrap|969 casualties,}} {{nowrap|27 of the 90}} Cruiser tanks and {{nowrap|64 of the 100}} Infantry tanks which had started the operation. German casualties were {{nowrap|678 men,}} {{nowrap|12 tanks}} destroyed, about {{nowrap|50 damaged}} (excluding vehicles repaired during the battle) and ten aircraft. British troops captured about {{nowrap|350 Italians}} but let most go when they withdrew. On 1 July, Wavell was sacked and replaced by General Claude Auchinleck, the Commander-in-Chief, India; Beresford-Pierce was sacked and replaced by Lieutenant-General Reade Godwin-Austen.{{sfn|Playfair|Flynn|Molony|Toomer|2004|pp=171, 316}}
See also
Notes
{{notelist}}
Footnotes
{{Reflist|20em}}
References
{{refbegin}}
- {{cite book |first=F. |last=Harrison |title=Tobruk: The Great Siege Reassessed |publisher=Arms and Armour Press |location=London |edition=Brockhampton Press |year=1999 |orig-year=1996 |isbn=978-1-86019-986-8}}
- {{cite book |last=Hinsley |first=F. H. |series=History of the Second World War |title=British Intelligence in the Second World War. Its influence on Strategy and Operations |location=London |publisher=HMSO |year=1994 |orig-year=1993 |edition=2nd rev. abr. |isbn=978-0-11-630961-7}}
- {{cite book |first1=M. |last1=Howard |last2=Sparrow |first2=J. |title=The Coldstream Guards, 1920–1946 |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=London |year=1951 |oclc=9151069}}
- {{cite book |last=Lewin |first=R. |title=The Life and Death of the Afrika Korps |author-link=Ronald Lewin |year=1979 |orig-year=1977 |publisher=Batsford |location=London |edition=Corgi |isbn=978-0-552-10921-5}}
- {{cite book |first=R. |last=Lyman |title=The Longest Siege: Tobruk, the Battle that Saved North Africa |publisher=Macmillan |location=London |year=2009 |isbn=978-0-230-71024-5}}
- {{cite book |last=Maughan |first=B. |url=https://www.awm.gov.au/collection/RCDIG1070202/ |series=Official History of Australia in the Second World War Series 1 (Army) |volume=III |title=Tobruk and El Alamein |year=1966 |publisher=Australian War Memorial |location=Canberra |edition=online scan |oclc=954993}}
- {{cite book |last=Pitt |first=B. |title=The Crucible of War: Wavell's Command |volume=I |year=2001 |orig-year=1980 |edition=Cassell |publisher=Jonathan Cape |location=London |isbn=978-0-304-35950-9 |url=https://archive.org/details/crucibleofwar00pitt |url-access=registration |via=Archive Foundation}}
- {{cite book |first1= I. S. O. |last1=Playfair |author1-link=Ian Stanley Ord Playfair |first2=G. M. S. |last2=Stitt |first3=C. J. C. |last3=Molony |first4=S. E. |last4=Toomer |editor-last=Butler |editor-first=J. R. M. |editor-link=James Ramsay Montagu Butler |series=History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Military Series |title=The Mediterranean and Middle East: The Early Successes Against Italy (to May 1941) |volume=I |publisher=HMSO |year=1957 |orig-year=1954 |edition=4th impr. |isbn=978-1-84574-065-8 |display-authors=1 }}
- {{cite book |first1=I. S. O. |last1=Playfair |first2=F. C. |last2=Flynn |first3=C. J. C. |last3=Molony |first4=S. E. |last4=Toomer |editor-last=Butler |editor-first=J. R. M. |series=History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Military Series |title=The Mediterranean and Middle East: The Germans come to the help of their Ally (1941) |volume=II |edition=facs. pbk. repr. Naval & Military Press |year=2004 |orig-year=1956 |location=London |publisher=HMSO |isbn=978-1-84574-066-5 |display-authors=1}}
- {{cite book |first=E. |last=Rommel |author-link=Erwin Rommel |editor-last=Liddell-Hart |editor-first=Basil |editor-link=Basil Liddell Hart |title=The Rommel Papers |publisher=Da Capo Press |location=Boston, MA |year=1982 |orig-year=1953 |isbn=978-0-306-80157-0}}
{{refend}}
Further reading
- {{cite thesis |last=Dando |first=N. |title=The Impact of Terrain on British Operations and Doctrine in North Africa 1940–1943 |type=PhD |url=https://pearl.plymouth.ac.uk//handle/10026.1/3035 |year=2014 |publisher=Plymouth University |access-date=17 October 2015 |oclc=885436735}}
- {{cite book |last=Jentz |first=T. L. |title=Tank Combat in North Africa: The Opening Rounds, Operations Sonnenblume, Brevity, Skorpion and Battleaxe, February 1941 – June 1941 |publisher=Schiffer |year=1998 |location=Atglen, PN |lccn=97-80326 |isbn=978-0-7643-0226-8}}
External links
{{commons category|World War II in North Africa|Operation Skorpion}}
- [http://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/UN/UK/UK-Med-II/UK-Med-2-8.html Hyperwar: The Desert Fighting in May and June 1941]
- [http://desertrats.org.uk/battles1941.htm#Brevity The History of the British 7th Armoured Division "The Desert Rats"]
{{World War II}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Skorpion}}
Category:North African campaign
Category:Western Desert campaign
Category:Egypt in World War II
Category:Battles and operations of World War II involving Italy
Category:Military operations of World War II involving Germany