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What Actually Happened: The
Allies were under a lot of pressure to
open up a second front in 1942. The US wanted to go directly to an invasion of
France in the fall of 1942. The British thought (probably correctly) that was a
good way for the Allies to get a lot of people killed. The British pushed for
an invasion of French North Africa instead, followed by an invasion of France
in 1943. The Americans eventually went along, though reluctantly. The Americans
correctly thought that going to the Mediterranean might kill any chance of an
invasion of France in 1943. They also thought it would turn the war into a
matter of protecting British colonial interests rather than defeating Hitler.
What Might Have Happened: The US officially goes along with Operation
Torch, but several key US military leaders oppose it privately a bit more
bitterly than they did in our time-line. As a result, things just keep getting
delayed. US troops really did desperately need more training, and more
realistic training before they went up against the Germans. So lets say they
get that training in the form of a large-scale desert warfare training and
logistics exercise that delays Torch by a few weeks and also uncover
deficiencies that make it necessary to delay things a little more. At that
point, Roosevelt intervenes. The allies promised Stalin some kind of second
front in 1942. They are going to give it to him, even if it consists of two old
men carrying broomsticks. The Torch landings finally happen in very early
December, between three and four weeks later than they did in our time-line.
Short-term Consequences: That sounds like a rather minor change, but
it starts having major consequences quickly. In our time-line, the Torch
landings took place on November 8, 1942, before the Soviet offensive that
trapped the Germans in Stalingrad (November 23, 1942). In this time-line, it
takes place after that offensive. That has two consequences. First, the Germans
have considerably more resources to shift into dealing with Stalingrad. Second,
because they use those resources at Stalingrad, they have considerably less
left to deal with the Torch landings.
How big of a shift would that involve? Well, in our time-line the Germans
airlifted men and supplies into Tunisia in response to Operation Torch. They
also invaded and occupied Vichy France with something like ten divisions. Let's
say that in total the German response to Operation Torch in our time-line involved
a little over a dozen German divisions, a considerable number of fighter
aircraft, and over 600 transport planes (400 of them transferred in from other
fronts, including the Russian front.) My back-of-the envelope calculations say
that those transports managed to fly an average of roughly 130 tons of supplies
per day across the Mediterranean in November thru December 1942, along with
thousands of men. By comparison, supplying Stalingrad from the air would have
required at least 500 tons per day. Stalingrad was a major enough crisis that
the Germans would have almost certainly sent all of those divisions and all of
those planes into the struggle.
As a result, the battle around Stalingrad would takes on a very different
form. In all likelihood, the Germans still couldn't supply the trapped German
army from the air. The extra planes would help, but there would be other
bottlenecks that would make that impossible. In our time-line, the Luftwaffe
never even came close to supplying enough for the German pocket. They were
actually lucky to get one-third of the daily requirements in on a continuing
basis. At the same time, if the extra planes managed to make the gap between
needs and supplies smaller, the trapped Germans would be able to hold out
longer, and tie up more Soviet troops during the time that they held out. The
extra dozen divisions give attempts to break through to the trapped troops more
power. Is it enough to manage a breakthrough? Maybe. Let's follow the battle.
The battle for Stalingrad: With Sixth Army trapped at
Stalingrad, the
Germans are facing a material disaster. They are also facing a huge loss of
military prestige. Hitler realizes that, and throws every reserve the Germans
have into salvaging the situation. Without Operation Torch, that means a much
more powerful force than in our time-line. An airlift gets under way. On a good
week it supplies about 40 percent of Sixth Army's minimum needs. At the same
time, the Germans take the offensive to carve out a corridor to the trapped
army. With the extra divisions, progress is more rapid. It is beginning to look
like a rescue is possible. As the rescue operation reaches a crucial stage,
Operation Torch finally happens. We'll look into that more later, but for now
the importance is that Hitler is distracted. He is also given political cover
to be used if Stalingrad is lost. It can be presented as a temporary tactical
withdrawal to free up troops to react to Operation Torch.
German General Manstein subtly plays to that aspect of allowing the German
troops inside the pocket to attempt a breakout and link up with the rescue
force. As Hitler desperately tries to improvise a force to counter Operation
Torch, he finally gives in and allows General Manstein to order a breakout
attempt from the Stalingrad pocket. The transport planes concentrate on getting
motor fuel to the pocket, then the German forces inside Stalingrad attempt
their breakout. They manage to link up with the rescue force, and the Germans
send urgently needed supplies through the corridor to bring Sixth Army back up
to full fighting power.
The Soviets see victory slipping away from them, and quickly launch phase
two of their offensive. They try to cut the corridor to Stalingrad, while at
the same time pushing an ambitious offensive aimed at cutting off the bulk of
the southern third of the German army in the Soviet Union. The initial part of
this second offensive cuts through a part of German lines held by the Italians.
The Soviets break through, and it looks like a disaster even greater than the
one the Germans just escaped from is about to happen. Hitler reluctantly gives
Manstein a free hand with his forces. Manstein withdraws from exposed
positions, including Stalingrad and the Caucasus, creates a mobile reserve,
lets the Soviet offensive over-extend itself, then cuts off major parts of the
Soviet army and sends the rest fleeing back in disorder. That happened on a
smaller scale in our time-line, even with Sixth Army still trapped in Stalingrad, but in this time-line the Soviet disaster is amplified by the extra
troops at Manstein's disposal. The offensive is stopped only by the spring
thaws. The German lines stabilize considerably east of where they did in our
time-line. Unfortunately for them, that means that Stalingrad and the Caucasus oil
fields still appear to be within reach, which may cause problems later. Right
now, though, Hitler is more concerned about the crisis in North Africa.
Operation Torch: Operation Torch happens at the height of Germany's
troubles in the Soviet Union. The Vichy French in North Africa are aware of the
German troubles, and that makes the landings easier. Petain, head of the Vichy
French government, quietly signals that Vichy forces should not resist the
landing. Most of them don't. That infuriates Hitler, and by early January 1943
he puts his attention to gathering a force to restore the situation. His
initial idea is to occupy Vichy France, push Franco to allow his forces passage
through Spain, then to push out of the Spanish part of Morocco and trap the Allies
in a giant pincer movement in combination with Rommel's Africa corp. At the
moment, though, Hitler doesn't even have enough in the way of reserves to be
sure he could occupy Vichy France, much less any of the rest of it, and Rommel
is trapped in a dwindling pocket of Libya, with collapse of his forces
imminent. Also, with the situation in the Soviet Union still looking grim for
the Germans, Franco has no desire to be accommodating.
The Vichy French officially condemn their people in North
Africa for going
over to the Allies, while quietly sounding those Allies out to find out if they
would be able to send troops to help defend Vichy France against the German
invasion that they are pretty sure is coming. Hitler pretends to take Vichy
actions at face value, while taking urgent steps to put together an invasion
force. The Italians are quite willing to help out with that, and they do have a
considerable number of divisions available, but Hitler knows by now that those
divisions are of little real value.
Mussolini sees the writing on the wall in North Africa,
and he wants an easy
triumph to offset the morale effect of losing Libya. As happened in our
time-line, the Italians invade the Vichy French-held island of Corsica from
neighboring Sardinia. In our time-line, that invasion happened as the remainder
of Vichy France was being occupied by Germany, so there was little resistance.
In this time-line, French forces on the island resist as best they can, and
call for help. French naval units based in North Africa respond. The French
North African government also sends a few planes on one-way missions to the
island. French ships and submarines off-load arms and a few men. The Italians
aren't numerous enough or well-equipped enough to quickly take the island, so
fighting escalates on and around it.
Hitler is furious with Mussolini, not because of the attack
but because it
failed to quickly take Corsica. In mid-to-late January, the situation in Russia
is still very much up in the air. A division or two could tip the balance. At
the same time, Hitler can't afford to see the Allies gain access to Corsica
without a fight. He transfers Luftwaffe fighter units to Italian bases in
Sardinia, and uses them to attack French naval forces from North Africa. He
also puts enormous pressure on Vichy France not to get involved in the
fighting. He threatens an immediate occupation of the unoccupied zone of France
if Vichy sends help to Corsica.
Vichy France has a major problem. On the one hand, they are
in no position
to get Hitler any more angry at them than he already is. On the other hand,
French public opinion demands that Corsica not be given up without a fight,
especially not to the Italians. After the French surrender in 1940, the French
hid a considerable amount of war material away from the Germans. One of the
generals in charge of that effort quietly begins retrieving some of those
stockpiles and smuggling small arms to Corsica. Petain probably knows that's
going on, but neither encourages or discourages it. The French Resistance finds
that the Corsica issue is very good for recruitment, and begins smuggling
volunteers from France to fight in Corsica. The large French navy based in
Vichy France chafes at sitting on the sidelines while French naval forces from
North Africa slug it out with the Italians. Several smaller vessels defect in
order to join the fighting.
The Allies see an opportunity in Corsica, but they are
deeply divided on how
to take advantage of it. Rommel is still holding out, and still potentially
dangerous in Libya, though it looks like his forces are about to fold. The
British want to put a major effort into taking Corsica, use it as a base to
take Sardinia, then either go into southern France or invade Italy. The US
wants to wind down what they consider a sideshow, then invade Northern France
in May or June of 1943. For now, the Allies simply re-equip French troops in
North Africa, which frees up arms to be sent to Corsica, and prepare to airdrop
weapons to French on the island. The British want to do more, but the
opportunity came too unexpectedly, and it will be some time before they have
the logistics in place to take advantage of it.
Meanwhile, tension is growing on the Vichy French-Italian
border. French
anger over Corsica and Italian frustration over their inability to take the
island leads to an escalating series of border clashes, and incidents involving
Italian armistice inspectors. Mussolini accuses the Vichy government of moving
forces and weapons into Corsica, and demands that the small Vichy army be disarmed.
Hitler wants to keep a lid on the situation for now if at all possible. By the
beginning of February he has reserves capable of taking Vichy France, but not
of taking on Vichy France plus the Allies if they move to help the French.
Hitler recalls Rommel from North Africa, partly to head any invasion, and
partly to keep him from being tainted by the imminent collapse of Axis forces
in North Africa. Those forces collapse less than a week later, in early
February.
The loss of North Africa puts Mussolini in deep trouble,
both with the
Italian public at large and with the other Italian leaders. He needs a quick
victory. He can't get that in Corsica without German help. The bulk of the
Italian navy is essentially immobilized due to fuel shortages, and the Italian
merchant marine has been virtually destroyed in the futile effort to keep
Africa Korp supplied. He simply can't support a large enough force in Corsica
to conquer the island. The Italian army has suffered a series of humiliating
small defeats in Corsica, and is gradually losing control of more of the
island. This is still a sideshow compared to the fighting in the Soviet Union
and North Africa, with three divisions of Italian troops fighting a French
force of no more than ten thousand fairly well organized and armed men, and
twenty to thirty thousand more partially armed irregulars. The French are able
to hold on and actually make gains primarily because the Italians can't keep
their men supplied, and morale is extremely low. Mussolini knows that his
regime won't survive the loss of North Africa, especially not if they lose in
Corsica as well. He needs to pull the Germans into the fighting, and hope they
can produce some victories for him.
In mid-February, as the fallout from North Africa spreads,
Mussolini sends a
multi-division force across the border between Italy and the unoccupied zone of
Vichy France, ostensibly to intercept a shipment of Vichy arms bound for
Corsica. French forces in the area deploy and start fighting back. The Vichy
French government wavers as Petain weighs the balance of power. The Germans are
scoring victories in the Soviet Union again, but they just lost their last
foothold in North Africa. Vichy France has secret plans to mobilize enough men
to triple the 100,000 man army allowed to it in France under the armistice. It
also has plans to mobilize trucks to give that army mobility, and even plans to
hastily arm and armor several hundred tracked munitions carriers that have been
produced officially as forestry tractors. The Vichy French also have small
amounts of artillery hidden away, along with small arms and even several dozen
planes. The resulting army would have a difficult time defending Vichy against
a full-scale Italian assault, much less a German one though, and Petain knows
it.
French resistance groups and a few local Vichy troops form
the backbone of a
mainly spontaneous French reaction to the Italian invasion. The British and,
more reluctantly, the Americans, airdrop weapons to the resistance fighters,
though the long distance between North Africa and France restricts what they
can do. The French in Corsica have managed to get some primitive airstrips
ready, and are getting some supplies by air from North Africa. They are also
getting supplies by ship from North Africa. As the fighting in southern France
intensifies, arms start flowing through Corsica and to resistance fighters in
France.
Petain and Vichy are running out of time. The improvised
defense against the
Italian invasion does better than the French have any right to expect. That
simply makes the situation worse, by pushing the Italians to commit more
forces, by making Hitler nervous, and by making the French public less accepting
of any attempt on the part of Vichy to back down. Hitler has put his forces on
a high level alert, and demanded that Vichy immediately order its forces back
to their barracks. Hitler has already decided to occupy Vichy, but he would
like to wait another week or two to build up his forces if the situation allows
it, and if at all possible do it without a fight.
The Vichy French have been urgently trying to find out if
the Allies would
be able to help them in the event of a German invasion. The British want to,
but their ability to do so is rather limited due to shipping constraints. The
US has begun to see the potential of sending troops to southern France, but in
late February 1943, they still have a lot to learn about moving troops quickly
in response to opportunities. The US response would be even more limited than
the British one. In both time-lines, the Vichy French government has told the
Allies that if they come to France in force, the Vichy French would join them.
The key question is whether or not the Allies can come in enough force to keep
southern France out of the hands of the Germans. The Vichy government looks at
the gradually massing German army in Northern France, looks at the recently
victorious Allies in North Africa, and makes a choice. Petain quietly informs
the Allies that a full-scale Italian invasion is now underway, and he thinks
that a German invasion is imminent. He also says that the Vichy army will
fight. Then he orders the Vichy army to secretly mobilize and deploy its hidden
weapons.
Hitler has been half expecting some such move, though he
thinks that a
French partial mobilization aimed at the Italians is more likely initially. He
is actually hoping that French forces will get pulled into the fighting with
the Italians. He knows that the key is not just defeating Vichy, but defeating
Vichy fast enough that the Germans can get to the ports of southern France
before the Allies do. The Vichy French actually get almost a day's head start
before the Germans become aware of the extent and orientation of their
mobilization. Hitler moves quickly and decisively when he does become aware of
what is going on. German forces quickly move south, and almost immediately tear
holes in the improvised Vichy French lines. The French fight back fiercely in
places, but the Germans are just too well equipped and too mobile to be
stopped.
Churchill orders that an expeditionary force be sent from
North Africa to
southern France and Corsica immediately. The Allies have done some preparations
for such a force, but they still have to improvise desperately. Petain issues a
no surrender order. Vichy troops are to head for the hills and continue
fighting as guerrillas if they are bypassed by the Germans and can't make it
back to French lines. At the same time, the Vichy government begins deploying
as much of its resources as possible to defend the French southern ports. The
Vichy French have a fairly large airforce consisting mainly of nearly obsolete
Dewoitine 520 fighter planes. As the Germans advance toward the edge of the
range of their fighters, the French deploy their fighters on strafing missions
to delay the German advance.
The British win the race to the ports of southern France,
deploying in
several of them before the Germans reach them. The Vichy French navy plays a
major role in making that possible, with its battleships and smaller vessels
coming close to shore and laying down a heavy bombardment. The US also sends a
smaller contingent from North Africa. A joint US/British force also lands in Corsica
and begins rooting the Italians out of the island. The Germans send aircraft
and a small force to maintain the situation on Corsica while they concentrate
their main effort on the mainland.
Fortunately for the Germans, the spring thaw has slowed
activity in the
Soviet Union. The Germans use the pause to shift battle-hardened troops from
the eastern front to southern France. Those troops quickly clean out Vichy
French conventional resistance outside of the coastal pockets, though a large
number of French troops make it to Switzerland where they are interned. The
Germans then launch a heavy and very skillful attack on the coastal pockets.
The Allies can't build up as quickly as the Germans, and they quickly lose
control of the air as the Luftwaffe takes over French airbases and brings in
planes from the eastern front. The limited number of airfields inside the
coastal pockets makes them very vulnerable to German attack, and air support
from Corsica is not really feasible because of the condition of airfields
there. Distance is also a factor.
The Allies so have Ultra on their side. That helps a lot,
but not enough.
Losing control of the air makes the Allied position untenable, and the Allies
eventually have to evacuate southern France. In some ways it's worse than
Dunkirk. Thousands of Allied soldiers die in the evacuation. Thousands more
become POW's. The remainder are evacuated to Corsica, along with over 150,000
Vichy French troops and cadres, along with hundreds of thousands of French
civilians.
The French navy and most of its merchant marine heads to
North Africa after
helping with the evacuation. Petain and most of his government flees to
Corsica. A large part of the French airforce makes it to Corsica too. A few of
the most collaborationist members and former members of the Vichy French
government go over to the Germans and form a new collaborationist government.
With crushing victories in both the Soviet Union and the
west, the Germans
are riding high. They are also overconfident. The large mass of disorganized
and poorly equipped Allied troops on Corsica represents both a short-term
opportunity and a long-term threat. Germans and Italians still cling to a tiny
toehold on the island. Hitler makes taking Corsica his major priority for late
spring of 1943. He feels that one more major defeat will knock England out of
the war politically if not militarily, while slowing down the US buildup long
enough for him to knock the Soviets out of the war.
The Germans feel that they have a window of opportunity
until the Allies
reorganize and re-equip. They build up on Sardinia as quickly as they can, then
launch a blitz to take Corsica. This is a major effort, with an airborne
assault combined with a Panzer-led breakout from the German-held pocket. It
fails. Ultra eliminates the surprise that the Germans are counting on. The
Allies rush equipment in and restore some degree of organization to the
recently evacuated troops. The German airborne component is essentially
destroyed, while the panzers are slowed, then stopped by Allied air attacks and
use of armor. Ultra intercepts give the Allies just enough of an edge to stop
the initial assault, then superior numbers and firepower gradually force the
Germans back. The battle for Corsica rages on until July 1943, but the Allies
are able to build up an overwhelming manpower and firepower advantage. The last
German and Italian troops on Corsica are pushed into the sea in mid-July. That
sets the stage for a possible Allied invasion of the nearby island of Sardinia.
Meanwhile, back in the Soviet Union, neither the Germans nor
the Soviets are
anxious to be the first to take the offensive. The Germans want to tidy up in
the west, and also get the new Panther tanks in operation in large numbers. The
Soviets have taken enormous casualties and lost a great deal of equipment. The
Soviet Union can make up those losses, but it takes a while. The eastern front
is rather quiet from late March until mid-July. As in our time-line, the
Soviets and Germans quietly sound each other out on the possibility of a
separate peace. The two sides are very far apart on what constitutes an
acceptable peace though, and negotiations break down.
Hitler is not willing to let the summer go by in the Soviet
Union without
some kind of offensive, but what kind of offensive? The Germans no longer have
the resources to go on the offensive all along the front. An offensive to
finish off Leningrad has some appeal. It would free up a large number of German
troops. On the other hand it would involve city fighting, which the Germans had
quite enough of at Stalingrad. A renewed offensive against Stalingrad and the
Caucasus oil is another option. The dangers of that in terms of a long,
vulnerable flank have been made obvious to the Germans. That leaves an attack on
Moscow. The Soviets in the Center have bled themselves white in a futile
attempt to push the Germans out of a salient extending toward Moscow, just as
they did in our time-line. Hitler doesn't really want to go for Moscow again,
but it seems like the least bad of his alternatives.
Where do things go from here? Would you like for me to
continue this for
next POD?
What do you think of this scenarios? Do you like this sort of longer scenario? Comments are very welcome.
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