42 words. That is how long it took Irvin Raml, the desert fox, the most feared panzer commander in the Vermacht, the man who had driven the British Empire to the edge of collapse across 2,000 m of North African sand to sentence an entire American army to death. 42 words delivered in a German staff briefing on February 23rd, 1943, 4 days after his armored columns had shredded the US Second Corps at a place called Casarine Pass like paper through a meat grinder.

“The Americans are not soldiers yet,” Raml told his staff. They are welle equipped tourists who do not know what they are doing. Give me 48 hours and I will destroy what remains of their army in Africa. 42 words. The confidence of a man who had just watched American tanks burn by the hundreds.

American boys run by the thousands. American commanders collapse under pressure they had never been trained to survive. Here is the question that drives everything that follows. What happens when the most dangerous general in the German military makes a promise to destroy you? And the man you send to answer that promise is George S.

Patton. February 25th, 1943. Tabessa, Algeria. The US Second Corps had ceased to function as a fighting organization. That is not an editorial judgment. That is the conclusion written in the afteraction reports of American officers who witnessed what Cassarine Pass produced, not just in casualties, but in something harder to measure and more dangerous to ignore.

The numbers alone were staggering. In 6 days of fighting through the mountain passes of western Tunisia, second core had lost 6,500 men, killed, wounded or captured. Nearly 200 tanks destroyed. 183 artillery pieces abandoned in the sand. An entire armored division. The first armored functionally wrecked. Supply depots overrun.

Headquarters staff caught in open trucks fleeing forward positions as German armor rolled through. But the numbers are not the worst part. The worst part is what came after them. When Raml’s panzers finally halted, stopped not by American resistance, but by overextended supply lines and a British defense to the north, the men of second core were not regrouping.

They were drifting, moving in small packs through the Algerian mountains, uncertain of their own unit boundaries, uncertain of their officers, uncertain of whether anyone was coming to retrieve them, or whether the whole theater had simply collapsed while they weren’t looking. At one sergeant in the first infantry division, 23 years old, from Mon, Georgia, a man named Thomas Breedlove, who had survived the landing in North Africa and 3 months of desert campaigning, wrote in his diary on February 27th, 1943, “Don’t know where the rest of the

company is. Don’t know where battalion is. Heard the Germans hit our artillery and got everything. We’re walking west. Nobody’s talking much. Can’t shake the feeling we just got beat. Not lost. Beat. That feeling, that specific bone deep recognition that something fundamental had failed was exactly what Dwight Eisenhower and the Allied command were most afraid of.

Because an army that believes it has been beaten sometimes becomes an army that cannot stop believing it. On March 6th, 1943, had they sent the one man who might be able to reverse that belief in time to matter, General George S. Patton arrived at Second Corps headquarters near Tabessa.

Not in a staff car, but in a cavalcade, motorcycles, armored scout cars, flags snapping in the wind, sirens clearing traffic. He wore his lacquered helmet liner, his twin ivory handled revolvers. He was 60 years old, and he had the bearing of a man who had been waiting for this moment since he was 10. Within 90 minutes of arrival, he had relieved two officers, issued a general order mandating that every man in second core wear his helmet and his neck ties at all times in the desert, in combat, at mess, and delivered a briefing to his division

commanders that one witness described as the most frightening speech I ever heard a general give. The essence of it was this. They hit us hard. They will hit us again. And we are going to hit them first, faster, and from a direction they are not expecting. The specific target was a valley and road junction southwest of a small Tunisian market town called El Guetar.

Think about what Eluetar meant strategically. The town sat at the mouth of a mountain pass that opened directly onto the coastal plane of eastern Tunisia. Through that pass ran the supply route connecting the German Italian Panzer Army Africa to its rear depot. Capture El Guitar, hold the pass and you split the Axis forces in two.

You cut off Raml’s ability to shift armor laterally between the northern and southern fronts. You force him to fight a two-front defensive battle with a supply line under direct American fire, which is why the Germans had fortified it. The job of taking Elwitar would fall to the first infantry division, the big red one, veterans of the torch landings, and three months of Tunisian combat, and to the first Ranger battalion operating on their flank.

Planning began on March 12th, 1943. The operation was scheduled for March 17th. The man Patton chose to carry the assault forward at its critical point, was Captain James R. Red. Foresight, 27 years old, commander of Company G, 18th Infantry Regiment, First Infantry Division, born in Scranton, Pennsylvania. married.

He kept the photograph inside his helmet liner, decreased from where he touched it before every operation. Two children he hadn’t seen in 14 months. Foresight was not the most celebrated officer in the big red one. He was not a West Pointer. He hadn’t written tactical papers or attended the command and general staff school. What he was, by every account of the men who served under him, was a reader.

A reader of ground. He could look at terrain, a ridge line, a dry creek bed, the angle of a shadow at 0600, and tell you where the enemy would be before you could see them. It was not mystical. It was mathematical. It was exactly the kind of battlefield intuition that Patton’s philosophy was designed to produce.

His unit, Company G, numbered 187 men as of March 14th. By the time the assault launched, they would be 171. 16 men evacuated with dysentery in the 2 days before the operation. In Tunisia in the spring of 1943, dysentery was not a medical footnote. It was a tactical variable. The plan, as headquarters designed it, was straightforward.

The Rangers would move at night to seize the high ground commanding the pass. The 18th Infantry would follow at first light, push through the pass, and establish a blocking position on the far side. Artillery support would be available from the 32nd Field Artillery Battalion. The flaw in this plan, the one that headquarters did not know about, could not have known about because no Allied patrol had yet reached the relevant ground, was the Wadi.

A dry riverbed roughly 40 meters wide and 3 meters deep ran across the floor of the valley at an angle that the available maps based on pre-war French survey data showed as negligible, passable, almost flat. It was not flat. It was not passable by wheeled vehicles without engineering support. and the 18th Infantry had no engineering support assigned.

Nobody in Patton’s headquarters knew this yet. 40 mi to the east in the German 10th Panzer Division’s command post near Mnasi, General Friedrich Fonro received the intelligence assessment that American forces were moving toward Eluetar and responded with a response that his staff would later report almost word for word to Allied interrogators after the campaign.

They are coming after their embarrassment at Casarine. Let them come. They will find the same result they always find when they try to fight Germans. Reinforce the forward screen, but do not move the main body. We will need the fuel later. Vonro was not a stupid man. He was in fact a capable commander who had fought in France, Russia, and North Africa.

He was making a rational decision based on accurate prior experience. The problem was that the prior experience was about to become obsolete. This video gives you the story, but the combat blueprint, our free newsletter, gives you everything that doesn’t fit in a video. Deeper details. Forgotten heroes. Free to join.

10 seconds to sign up. Link in the description. Now back in the video. March 17th, 1943. 0300 hours. The foothills south of Elguetar. The First Ranger battalion moved in darkness. No flashlights. No talking above a whisper. Boots wrapped in rags to muffle the sound against the stone. Colonel William O. And Darby, who had trained these men personally, who knew each of them by name, moved at the head of the column, and did not look at his map. He had memorized the map.

What he was looking at instead was the shape of the ridge line against the stars. Company G moved behind them in support. 171 men stretched into a single file that disappeared into the dark. Captain Foresight moved at the center of the column. He had a compass, a watch, and a handdrawn sketch of the objective made from the French survey maps.

He would later describe the feeling of moving through unknown ground at night in an afteraction report written in the clinical language the army required, but with one sentence that escaped the clinical filter. entirely. The ground was telling us something was wrong before we had any reason to know it.

He meant the wadi, but the column reached it at 0417. Not where the maps said it would be, not the shape the maps said it would be. In the gray pre-dawn, it yawned across the valley floor like something that had been cut there deliberately. A ditch built to stop exactly this kind of movement, except that no one had built it.

It had been built by 10,000 years of flash flooding. Foresight went forward personally. He walked the lip of the Wadi for 200 m in each direction. No crossing point, no ford. The walls were undercut, crumbling 3 meters of loose shale above a rock floor. A man could climb down. A jeep could not. A platoon level assault could potentially cross.

A regimenal assault with resupply vehicles and artillery prime movers absolutely could not. He called for the radio operator. The radio operator, a private first class, Augustine Delgado, 20 years old, from Albuquerque, New Mexico, was already working it. Working it the way you work a radio when you already know the answer you’re getting is bad.

Static, partial contact. The terrain, the high ridges on both sides of the valley was eating the signal. At 0443, Foresight managed to get through two battalion headquarters. He reported the obstacle. He asked for engineering support or a new route. The response from Lieutenant Colonel Ben Sternberg at battalion took 11 minutes to arrive, which in combat time is not 11 minutes. It is a separate lifetime.

New orders from division. The Rangers have secured the ridge line. Continue the assault. Mission timeline cannot slip. Move your company through the obstacle by foot and establish the blocking position. Vehicles will find an alternate route. Forsight read the order twice. Then he made the decision that a less competent officer might have refused to make and a more experienced one might have made faster.

He obeyed it because the rangers were already on the high ground because every minute that passed without infantry below them to hold the pass was a minute in which the Germans could counterattack the ridge. Because the mission had logic that did not stop being true because the ground had changed. He ordered company G into the Wadi.

It took 40 minutes to get 171 men across. 40 minutes of slipping on shale, of lifting equipment handto hand over crumbling walls, of cursing and whispers and praying that the German pickets above the pass were not mourning people. Three men twisted ankles. One broke his wrist. So they came out the other side at 0541, 4 minutes before first light, and immediately ran into the thing that no one in Allied headquarters had prepared for.

The forward screen von had ordered reinforced the previous day was not a platoon. It was not a company. It was two full companies of Panza grenaders, veterans of the Eastern Front, men who had learned to dig fast and shoot faster. Plus four Pac 40 anti-tank guns positioned at angles that covered every obvious approach to the pass.

They had been there since midnight. They were awake. They had been waiting. The ambush opened at 0547 from three directions simultaneously. No warning, no preliminary fire. Just the sudden worldending convergence of machine gun fire from the left, rifle fire from the front, and the hammer crack of an anti-tank gun somewhere to the right firing at a target that Foresight realized in the first half second of comprehension was not a tank.

The gun was firing at his men because the Germans had been told there were tanks with this column because their original intelligence about the American axis of advance had been accurate about everything except the Wadi. The ambush had been designed for armor. When armor didn’t appear, the PAC 40 crews did not have time to think.

They fired at what they could see. Private Henry Abramowitz, 22, Bronx, New York, Foresight’s radio operator’s assistant and the best poker player in Company G, was dead before he hit the ground. Corporal Mark Tisd Doll, 24, from Birmingham, Alabama, who had survived Casarine Pass by hiding under a dead mule for 6 hours and had never told anyone about it.

I made it four steps toward cover before the machine gun on the left found him. In the first 90 seconds of the ambush, company G lost 11 men. Foresight hit the ground and started moving. Not backward, not forward, sideways. He was looking for the shape of the fire, where it concentrated, where it thinned, where the enemy gunners were taking their cues from each other.

Because the men who planned an ambush always have a kill zone, and the edge of the kill zone, if you can reach it fast enough, is survivable. Every man who had been under Patton’s training felt the same thing in that moment. He wrote later, “You do not freeze. You think. The faster you think, the longer you live. Thinking is movement. Movement is survival.

” He got 12 men into a shallow depression at the base of the ridge. 12 men. The three rifles with full magazines. one Browning automatic rifle, two grenades. Behind him, his platoon leaders were doing what platoon leaders do in ambushes, making local decisions with fragmentaryary information and hoping the decisions were better than the alternative.

The radio reached battalion at 0601. Foresight reported the ambush, reported his casualties. He could count 15 confirmed down, guessed higher, and requested artillery support on the German positions. The response was the thing that made his stomach drop. Cannot confirm artillery support.

32nd FA Battalion is engaged on the northern flank. Air support unavailable. Weather closing in from the west. Hold position. Reinforce your left. He looked at Delgado, who was looking at the radio like it had said something in a language neither of them spoke. Hold position with 12 men in a hole. No artillery, no air, no vehicles that had made it across the Wii.

No reinforcements that could reach them without crossing the same ground the ambush was covering. Hold position meant die slower. Forsight put down the handset and looked at the ridge above him. The Rangers were up there somewhere, beyond German radio intercept range and German rifle range and apparently beyond the awareness of any headquarters currently coordinating American forces in this valley.

46 men of Company G had made it into or near the depression. 23 more were pinned in positions across the valley floor. 12 were not moving. 600 m to the north in a stone farmhouse that the German platoon commander was using as a command post. Hman Verer Kesler, 31, a career officer, a Sudatan German who had fought in France and three months in Tunisia, was already composing the message in his mind that he would send to von Brutch.

Americans attacked as expected, attack repulsed, light casualties, Americans retreating toward original positions. He did not send it yet. He was waiting for the Americans to break. They did not break. That was the moment. Not the heroism, not the courage, but the simple, confusing, operationally inconvenient fact that company G didn’t run when the first crack appeared in Kesler’s confidence. March 17th, 1943.

0620 hours. Foresight had perhaps 30 minutes before the Germans decided to press forward and turn a suppressed ambush into an encirclement. He could feel the logic of it. He would have done the same. He had 46 men. The Germans in front of him numbered based on the volume of fire, the positions of the guns, the pattern of the machine gun sweeps. somewhere between 200 and 280.

The math was not good. The math was in fact the math that headquarters used to justify the phrase hold position when they meant you are probably going to die and we cannot help you. Patton had a name for the thing that happened to officers when they looked at that math and accepted it. He called it the paralysis of the obvious.

In his field notes, distributed to every officer in second core after he assumed command, Patton had written something that foresight had read four times because it was the kind of sentence that sounded like a general’s boast until the moment you needed it, at which point it became operational doctrine. The enemy has a plan.

That plan has a shape. The shape has a weakness. The weakness is always in the one direction. The enemy is most certain you will not go. Because the enemy is a human being and human beings protect what they fear losing, not what they have already assumed they’ve won. Foresight looked at the ground. He did not look at the Germans.

He had looked at the Germans long enough. He looked at the terrain. To his left, the ridge, steep, rocky, covered by German observation. The panzer grenaders on the high ground had clear sight lines down the western slope. To his right, the valley floor, flat, open, covered by the PAC 40 guns and the machine gun that had already proven its range.

Directly ahead, the main German blocking position. Dug in, prepared, waiting. Behind him, the Wadi. 40 minutes of exposure to cross. None of these directions were the answer. The answer was the thing he had noticed while crossing the Wadi. the thing that had registered as a footnote in his mind and now rose to the surface with the clarity of the only option remaining.

On the eastern wall of the Wadi, roughly 300 m south of the crossing point the company had used, there was a section where the shale had collapsed inward, a natural ramp partially concealed from above by an overhang of harder rock. He had seen it at 0430 and noted it unconsciously as an alternate extraction route.

It was not an extraction route. It was a flanking route. The German ambush had been designed for an attack from west to east straight through the pass. Every gun was oriented west. Every observer was watching west, and the 300 meters of valley floor between his current position and that ramp would be visible for perhaps 40 seconds of running to one machine gun position on the ridge before a fold in the ground cut the sight line.

40 seconds at 120 m per minute for men carrying full combat loads over broken ground. not good odds. But odds have a different definition when the alternative is no odds at all. There was the civilian problem, the farmhouse. The same farmhouse Hman Kesler was using as his command post was almost certainly based on the laundry on the line Foresight had seen during the approach.

the small garden alongside the south wall, the two goat pens behind it, occupied by a Tunisian family that had not left. Families often did not leave. The Germans occupied your house and you stayed in the back room because leaving meant walking into a battlefield and that was worse. If Foresight’s flanking movement succeeded, if he could get his men around the German left, come up behind the farmhouse and hit the command post from a direction that nobody in the German position was watching.

The farmhouse became the flash point. An assault on a command post with a family inside. Foresight made the decision in under 60 seconds. He sent Sergeant First Class Luis Mononttoya, the oldest man in the company, 34, a career soldier from El Paso, Texas, who spoke enough Arabic to ask basic questions, forward with one other soldier.

Their job was not to fight. Their job was to move along the Wadi bank, reach the farmhouse’s south wall, find the civilians, and get them moving away from the building before the assault hit. Mononttoya went without hesitation into ground between two armed forces with no protection except the fact that neither side was watching it yet.

If you are a veteran watching this, you know exactly what Mononttoya volunteered for. You know what it costs a man to leave the relative safety of a fighting position to walk into open ground alone. The like button on this video takes 2 seconds. For Mononttoya and the men like him, it is the least we can do.

March the 17th, 1943. 0641 hours. Foresight split his remaining 46 men into four elements. Eight men would stay in the depression and keep firing, not to advance, but to keep the German observers watching west. Their job was noise. Their job was to be exactly what the Germans expected. Her 20 men would move south along the Wadi in two groups, concealed by the bank, toward the ramp.

10 men would follow foresythe directly. Eight men would hold the far right flank and act as a blocking force if the Germans moved to encircle. He gave Sergeant Firstclass Albert Drummond, 29, from Louisville, Kentucky, father of three, command of the suppression element with six words. Make it sound like 40 men.

Drummond looked at him. Yes, sir. The 20 flankers entered the wadi at 0644. Moving through a watti under fire is not like moving through a trench. A trench is linear. A watti is irregular. It bends. It narrows. It widens unexpectedly into pools of dried mud that slow your feet like wet concrete. The men moved bent double.

Rifles held horizontally to prevent barrels scraping stone. No talking, only the flat crack of Drummond’s men keeping up fire from the depression above and ahead. The ramp foresight reached it first. He looked up. The overhang was intact. The sight line to the ridge machine gun was blocked. Not fully, but enough. The 40-second window he had calculated would be 35 seconds here because the ramp came up at an angle and they would be moving uphill slower.

He turned to the man behind him, Private First Class Raymond Kowalic, 21, from Detroit, Michigan, who had never mentioned to anyone in Company G that he had been rejected by the Marines for being 2 lb underweight and had joined the Army. me the same afternoon and said, “When we clear the top, you go left. Don’t stop.

” Kowaltic nodded. They went up. 40 seconds is enough time for a machine gun to fire approximately 300 rounds. It is enough time for a trained observer to see, process, and report movement. It is enough time for a platoon commander to give the order to redirect fire. None of that happened. Not because they were invisible, because Drummond was doing his job.

Below and behind them in the depression, eight men with three rifles and one bar were creating not the sound of eight men, but the sound of a renewed assault. Drummond was cycling fire. Burst from left, burst from right. Bar in the middle. One grenade thrown at the maximum range. Then the cycle again. The German machine gun on the ridge rotated slightly west. Not much.

5°, but 5° was a corridor. Company G made it up the ramp and then everything went wrong. The German position was not where the map, updated or original, had shown it. The command post was correct, and the farmhouse was correct. But between the ramp and the farmhouse, 30 m of open ground that should have been a field, was a secondary fighting position.

Four men. An MG42 crew dug into a scrape that had been invisible from any angle of approach except the one Foresight was now occupying. The MG42 crew saw Company G. At the same moment, Company G saw the MG42 crew. Three seconds of mutual recognition, the specific terrifying pause before violence that every veteran of close combat describes with the same words regardless of theater or era or decade.

The pause where both sides understand what is about to happen. And the only question is who decides first. Kowaltic decided first. He was not a hero in the movie sense, but he was a 21-year-old boy from Detroit who was two seconds ahead of his own fear and moved before the fear could catch him.

He went left and forward simultaneously, not toward cover, toward the gun crew. And the rounds that the MG42 fired in the next 3 seconds went above and left of the position he had just been in. Foresight’s element cleared the fighting position in 40 seconds of work that he did not describe in his afteraction report in any detail whatsoever.

Because there are things that happen in 40 seconds that require the grammar of combat rather than the grammar of official documentation. The MG42 was silent at 0658. The farmhouse was 30 m ahead. Mononttoya was not at the farmhouse. Mononttoya was not visible anywhere. For 12 seconds, I foresight did not know if Mononttoya had reached the civilians or if Mononttoya was dead.

Then the door on the south wall of the farmhouse opened and a woman 40 years old, maybe 50, Tunisian in a gray jalaba, walked out with two children and a goat, moving south with a specific practiced calm of someone who has been told exactly where to go and is going there. Behind her came Mononttoya walking backward, rifle up, watching the door.

The civilians were out. The command post was occupied. The German commander was inside. Foresight hit the farmhouse from two directions at 0702. Hopman Kesler had received no warning. This is the operational truth that the afteraction records bear out. Not because his men failed to fight, but because the direction of the attack was, in the geometrically precise language of tactical analysis, impossible.

The American unit that had been pinned in the depression west of the pass was attacking from the south, from behind the German left flank, from the one direction that the entire engagement had been designed to make unreachable. Kesler’s first radio call after the farmhouse fell went to von Brutch’s headquarters at 0711.

The transcript was captured intact 6 weeks later when the German command post was overrun. Americans have flanked position 7. South approach. Unclear how. Request immediate reinforcement. Request artillery on our own former position. Fire on the farmhouse. Americans are there. Vonichi’s response took four minutes.

By then it was academic because captain foresight had not stopped at the farmhouse. This is the thing that Patton understood about momentum. That tactical momentum is not a metaphor but it is a physical phenomenon and it dissipates the moment you stop to consolidate what you have gained rather than drive toward what you need next.

In his notes to second corps officers, Patton had written, “An army is a river. Rivers don’t pause at the first ford. They find the sea.” Foresight found the German platoon command post for the forward blocking position, the one coordinating the ambush at 0714. He had 16 men left who were fully combat effective.

He had two who were moving on adrenaline and leg wounds that they had not yet allowed themselves to feel. He had no radio contact with battalion. He had one magazine and a half for his Thompson submachine gun. The platoon command post was also a communications nexus. Field telephone lines running to every gun position in the forward screen.

When Foresight’s men cut those lines at 0716, the forward screen went deaf. The Pack 40 guns stopped receiving directions. The machine gun on the ridge, which had been coordinating with forward observers, suddenly had no forward observers. Drummond’s eight men in the depression noticed the change in fire almost immediately.

They did not wait for orders. They stood up and walked forward. Not charged, walked. Because the fire had stopped and the ground was theirs. And they had been doing the most difficult thing in combat, holding without advancing for 37 minutes, and they were done with it. Private Delgado, who had been working the radio the entire time, who had finally reached Colonel Sternberg at battalion at 0719, relayed the situation in a voice that witnesses described as completely flat and completely calm.

Company G is through the pass. Position is ours. We need medics, and we need them now, sir. We need medics right now. at Von Brock’s headquarters. The reports arriving between 0711 and 0730 were, in the words of a German staff officer who survived the campaign and gave testimony to Allied historians in 1946. Each message was more confusing than the last.

The Americans were north of their position. The Americans were south of their position. Position 7 had fallen. Position 8 was not answering. The artillery was firing on coordinates that had already changed three times. The general said nothing for several minutes. Then he said, “They did not do what we thought they would do.” I had never heard him say that before about any enemy.

The pass fell completely by zero 800 hours. On March the 17th, 1943, Company G, 18th Infantry Regiment, First Infantry Division had done what 11 killed, 23 wounded, no artillery, no air support, and no vehicular crossing of an unmapped Wadi had made categorically impossible. Company G went into the pass with 171 men. 137 came out the far side.

If this story has stayed with you, the story of Red Foresight and the men of Company G and the channel that brings you stories like this needs your subscription to keep going. It takes two seconds. For the 34 men who didn’t come out, it’s the least we can do. The pass was held six days later on March 23rd, 1943. The German 10th Panzer Division launched a fullscale counterattack on the Elwetar position with 50 tanks and the expectation that the Americans would break again as they had at Casarine.

They did not break. The first infantry division and the first Ranger battalion held. The 10th Panzer lost 30 tanks and retreated. It would be recorded as the first American ground victory against the German military in the Second World War. March the 17th, 1943. 8:30 hours. The far mouth of the Elwetar Pass. The sun was up.

The wind was already warm, the kind of warm that in Tunisia becomes unbearable by noon. And the ground in front of the blocking position was covered with the detritus of a battle that had lasted less than 3 hours and felt like a week. Three German field pieces. One MG 42 that had been abandoned in the secondary position.

a field telephone exchange still intact, every handset in its cradle that foresight photographed personally because he knew someone in intelligence would want to see it. 17 German prisoners. All of them sitting with their hands on their heads. Most of them looking at the American soldiers with an expression that was not hate and was not defeat, but was something closer to recalibration.

The expression of men who had been told one thing about their enemy and discovered another. Captain Foresight found Sergeant Mononttoya at the farmhouse. The woman and her children had returned. The goat had not gone far. Mononttoya was sitting against the south wall, boots off, wrapping his right ankle.

He had turned it on the Wadi bank in the dark and said nothing about it until the shooting stopped. Her foresight sat next to him for 3 minutes without saying anything. Then he said, “Good work, Sergeant.” Mononttoya said the kids kept the goat quiet. I don’t know how that was the whole conversation. The German documentation of what happened at Eluar, both the March 17th assault and the March 23rd counterattack, did not emerge in full until Allied forces captured Axis headquarters files in the final Tunisian campaign of May 1943.

What the documents showed was not tactical information. What they showed was a fundamental revision in German operational thinking about the American military. General Friedrich von Brock interrogated by Allied officers after his capture on May 12th, 1943, less than 3 months after he had reinforced his forward screen without moving his main body because the Americans were welle equipped tourists, said the following, which appears in the Allied tactical and strategic assessments report.

North Africa theater, June 1943. At Eluar, I received my first true understanding of what General Patton had done with the American Second Corps. They did not fight as we expected. They fought as we would have fought, reading the ground, ignoring what should have been impossible, and moving when everything said to stop. That is not something you train in 6 months.

That is something a commander either creates in his men or does not. Patton had created it. The document also contained a field report from Hopman Kesler written two weeks after the engagement and in which he described the flanking movement of company G with the clinical respect that German military writing reserves for operations that genuinely surprise it.

The Americans move through terrain we had determined to be impassible. They did not seek the obvious approach. They found the one angle our position did not cover and they exploited it at the exact moment our fire discipline was most committed to the false threat. This was not luck.

This was doctrine applied by men who believed in it. Raml himself who had been removed from African command by Hitler in March 1943. physically broken by illness and professionally broken by supply failures, would write in his personal diary after the Tunisian campaign concluded in Allied victory on May 13th, 1943. The Americans I met at Caserene were not the Americans who held Eluar.

Either they learned very fast or Patton found a way to release what was already in them. I made the mistake of assuming they were what I saw first. I should have known all armies are what their commanders make them. 42 words to sentence an American army to death. Rather more words to acknowledge having been wrong.

George Patton received the report of the March 17th action at second core headquarters that same afternoon. By several accounts, including that of his aid to camp, Lieutenant Colonel Charles Codman, his response was not celebratory. He read the afteraction summary. He looked at the casualty list. He was quiet for a moment.

Then he said, “That’s what I wanted them to know how to do, not that’s what I wanted them to do.” That’s what I wanted them to know how to do. The distinction matters. Patton’s entire tactical philosophy, the one he had drilled into second core in the 10 days between his assumption of command and the Elguitar assault, was not about courage.

Every army has courage. It was about cognition, the ability to think under fire to read an obstacle, not as a stop sign, but as information about where the enemy was most vulnerable. Pressure makes diamonds, he had told his officers on March 8th. What I am asking of you is to think like diamonds while the pressure is being applied.

Company G, 18th Infantry Regiment, thought like diamonds. Their dead were buried at the Allied military cemetery at Gafsa, Tunisia, a city 40 mi west of Eluetar. The cemetery still exists. If you were to go there today, you would find 34 American graves from the El Guetar campaign marked with white marble stones in the precise geometric order that the American military uses to suggest that chaos and sacrifice can be made orderly in retrospect, even when they couldn’t be made orderly in the moment.

Private Henry Abramowitz, Bronx, New York, age 22. First marble stone in the third row. His family received his personal effects in June 1943. A wallet, a letter he had written but not mailed, and a deck of cards held together with a rubber band. The letter was addressed to his mother. It said, among other things, I think we’re figuring it out over here. Don’t worry.

If your father, grandfather, or great-grandfather served in North Africa, in the Tunisia campaign, in the second corps under Patton, in the first infantry division, or the Rangers or the tank destroyer battalions that held that ground, I want to hear about it in the comments. What unit? What campaign? Where did they end up? Those stories live in family memory and nowhere else.

Put them in the comments. Make them last a little longer. There is a ridge above Elwitar that still has no name on most maps. The locals have a name for it. The name translates roughly as the place where the Americans did not leave. They mean it as a fact, not a compliment. But it is both.