First
Battle of El Alamein
The Allied Eighth Army under General Claude Auchinleck had retreated from Mersa
Matruh to the Alamein Line, a forty mile gap between
El Alamein and the Qattara Depression, in Egypt.
On July 1 the German-Italian Afrika
Korps led by Erwin Rommel attacked. The Allied line
near El Alamein was not overrun until the evening and this hold up stalled the
Axis advance.
On July 2 Rommel concentrated his forces in the north,
intending to break through around El Alamein. Auchinleck
ordered a counter-attack at the centre of the Axis line but the attack failed.
The Allies also attacked in the south and were more
successful against the Italians. As a result of the Allied resistance, Rommel
decided to regroup and defend the line reached.
Auchinleck attacked again on
July 10 at Tel el Eisa in the north and over one
thousand prisoners were taken. Rommel's counter at Tel el Eisa
achieved little.
Auchinleck then attacked again
in the centre at the Ruweisat Ridge in two battles -
the First and Second Battles of Ruweisat on July 14
and July 21.
Neither battle was succcessful
and
the failure of armour to reach the infantry in time
at the Second Battle led to the loss of 700 men. Despite this another two
attacks were launched on July 27.
One in the north at Tel el Eisa
was a moderate failure. The other at Miteiriya was
more calametous, as the minefields were not cleared
and the infantry was left without armour support when
faced with a German counter-attack.
The Eighth Army was exhausted, and by July 31 Auchinleck ordered an end to offensive operations and the
strengthening of the defences to meet a major
counter-offensive.
The battle was a stalemate, but the Axis advance on
Alexandria (and then Cairo) was halted. See Second Battle of El Alamein for the
sequel.