Rommel

Erwin Johannes Eugen Rommel was born on November 15, 1891 to father Erwin, a school headmaster, and mother Helene von Luz, daughter of a local government official. This man was to later single-handedly affect the course of World War II and would be greatly admired by friend and foe alike.

Field Marshall Erwin Rommel was one of the greatest military leaders, with exceptional moral and tactical abilities. He was regarded with fear and respect among both his troops and his opposition. Rommel gave prisoners the same amount of food, water, and medical treatment as he did his own men, as well as set fire to orders from Hitler to execute Rommel’s prisoners.

Erwin Rommel was born in Heidenheim, Wurttemberg on November 15, 1891. He joined the 124th infantry regiment at age 21 as a cadet, and within two years had advanced to a second lieutenant and received his commission at the Danzig War Academy.

At the outbreak of World War One, Rommel was in the Danzig War Academy, and remained with there until late in 1916. Shortly after marrying Lucie Mollin, Rommel was called to the front lines. By the end of the war Rommel would earn the Pour le merite for his service on the French, Romanian, and Italian front lines.

After World War One, Rommel joined the Dresden Infantry School as an instructor. It was there that he wrote the book, Infantry Attacks. Not long after leaving the Dresden Infantry School, Rommel earned the rank of major.

In 1938 the recently appointed Colonel Rommel became commandant of the training facilities at Wiener Neustadt. Rommel would not remain long, because a new assignment was given to him. He was to take charge of protecting Adolf Hitler on his march into the Sudetenland and into Prague. He would also be in charge of protecting Hitler again on the night of the beginning of World War II, throughout the invasion of Poland. Afterwords, he would be promoted to major general, and re-assigned to the Seventh Panzer Division, which was responsible for the fall of France.

He changed command again, this time he would command an Infantry division in Libya. His service in Libya earned him the rank of Lieutenant General. Not long after he landed in Libya, he took off in his Heinkel He-111 to take pictures of ‘the land which he was about to defend’. After nine months in Libya, Rommel was, once again, relocated. However he remained in the desert, just in Africa.
Once in Africa, Rommel took charge of the famous Afrika Corps, and in the June of 1942, with Rommel at the peak of his military career, he became the youngest Field Marshall in the entire German army, mostly because of his success in defending Cyrenaica from the invading British army and pushing them back as far Alamein, Egypt. With reinforcements from Hitler, the British army might have been driven from Africa altogether. However, Hitler never sent those necessary reinforcements. As a result, the British couldn’t be driven off of Africa completely. Field Marshall Rommel, despite this lack of support from Hitler, had continued success until shortly after the Battle of Maedenine on May 5, 1943, when he became ill and was forced to return to Europe. There he would take command of Army Group B in northern Italy and eventually become the commander in chief in charge of the German forces in a large part of Europe.

While driving in the country in the spring of 1944, Rommel’s vehicle was strafed by an allied aircraft, Rommel was seriously injured, and was sent home to recover.

On October 14, 1944, two generals arrived to investigate Rommel in a plot to kill Hitler. He was a suspect for several reasons. Rommel had never joined the Nazi party, or supported Hitler, and often attempted to dissuade Hitler from his persecution of the Jewish people. He also had begun to criticize Hitler’s actions more frequently, and even ignored orders from Hitler. Against Hitler’s orders, Field Marshall Rommel treated prisoners of war with as much respect as he did his own men, and when ordered to execute them, set fire to the order. Rommel also criticized Hitler for not sending reinforcements whenever Rommel had requested them.
When Rommel was arrested by the two generals, he was supposed to go to trial, but the generals offered a second option. Field Marshall Rommel could go to trial for treason, and risk death and his family’s honor; or the generals could give him a poison capsule which he was to take, and no matter what the outcome of his investigations, his family would receive pay and maintain their family’s honor. The Field Marshall chose to take the poison, and died on the way to his trial.

Despite his death, Field Marshall Erwin Rommel was a tactical genius, no matter what side you were fighting for, but his name wasn’t spoken as much because he was undermanned and outgunned in his battle against the allies. However, against all odds, Field Marshall Rommel managed to prove that he was a formidable foe and a worthy ally. One of Rommel’s most famous battles was at Kolvorat Ridge during World War One where he took over nine thousand prisoners with only 150 men, 6 of which were killed with another 30 wounded, all in just over two days. Field Marshall Rommel also correctly predicted the location of the D-Day invasion site, Normandy, but his warning was ignored by Hitler, who sent the troops farther south to attack the troops that were supposedly landing there.

Re: Rommel

Oh ..Desert fox....:)

Re: Rommel

^ BLACKWATER recently had a quote of erwin rommel on their website. it is ironic that they would post a quote of a person who was their enemy in WWII.

I know it is kind off topic but it still shows the genius of the 'Desert Fox' reaching beyond his grave..

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Battle of Arras. Rommel's ability to innovate on the fly demontrated to best effect, and the beginning of his love affair with the FlaK 88.

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but he was deafeted by one and only General Montgomery of England....with code name..General Monty...in the battle of al- ameen..in egypt...the greatest battle of tanks..of human history..and this war in 1942 was the turning point of Nzis defeat ..in WW2...

Re: Rommel

There were several turning points in WW2, but the myth of Nazi superiority was shattered in 'Stalingrad' Russia.

Russia accounted for over 3,000,000 Germans killed, whereas the entire Western allies could kill only 200,000 Germans.

Millions of Russians were killed in this war - some say 20,000,000 died. More than all the other countries put together.

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agreed...general winter beated Napolean as well as hitler.....

but not General akhtar Abdul rahman...:)

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Germany over extended itself...if it hadn't the world would be a different place today.

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IF Mussoloni hadn't attack Greece and needed the German army to bail him out of the mess he got Italy into, the Germans would have attacked Russia much earlier in the year and completed their conquest before winter set in.

With Russia defeated, Egypt would swiftly fall next, followed by the middle east and the planned German takeover of the Indian subcontinent.

We probably wouldn't have done too badly out of it; Nazi racial theory classified north Indians as partially Aryan (which meant that 4,000 Indians were formed into a unit of the SS). The bad news is it meant Bose would have become India's leader, and he was against Partition, and would have had a Nazi army at hand to crush the All-India Muslim League movement for it's pro-British stance in the war.

With Europe, India and North Africa under German domination.... only the Royal Air Force, Royal Navy, the Commonwealth forces, and the American forces would stand in the way of Germany breakng out of Europe and dominating the world.

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I think their biggest mistake was attacking Russia...that's when their fortunes started to change.

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Germany could have still taken on and defeated Russia within year - Moscow was always the key. If Operation Barberossa had begun on the original timetable of being a spring offensive rather than summer, the Germans could have completely crushed Russia and forced a peace before winter set in. That would have freed up the bulk of the strength of the Wehrmacht, Luftwaffe and SS for operations against the Allied Powers.

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Defeated but at what cost? It would have spread the Germans out too thin. They should have consolidated their position in europe before attacking Russia. Fighting two wars in two different theatres at the same time was a recipe for disaster.

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^^ wow...you seems to be really good at WW2 knowledge...:)

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There is book called “The Forgotten Soldier” based on the memoirs of a fallen Wehrmacht soldier. It details how the non-russians welcomed the germans [ukranians gave potatoes etc as food free to germans] because the western ally Stalin was a maniac. But the germans screwed it up due to their brutal aryanism so much that they didn’t have food to eat when the winter set in. It was kind of sad that they had to steal food to survive, one example was of a soldier who was caught stealing from another dead soldier and was court martialed right at the spot [shot]. It shows the discipline in the german army that is absent in “our” pakistani army.

Even at the battle of Moscow, the germans came really close to victory. There is a reason that this battle never really gets mentioned in the russian history. The russians had good spies and they were able to move 400,000 siberians right away to moscow because Japan wasn’t going to attack them. It was after moscow [thousands of red army soldiers surrendered?? :eek: ] that russians devised their back columns who would fire on anyone that decided to “cut and run” from the battlefield.

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Germany suffered appalling losses both in men and material in winter on the eastern front. At Stalingrad alone, equipment sufficient for 45 divisions had been lost. Material losses far exceeded production. Demographic indicators also showed that Germany's manpower had already peaked and was set to decline.

The losses in Russia effectively turned the war on the eastern front from an offensive war into a defensive war. Hitler with some reluctance had decreed that the Wehrmacht should pass to strategic defence in the east.

Army Group Commander Field Marshals Von Kluge and Von Manstein had opined that a limited offensive should be launched in Kursk area following the losses caused to the Red Army in Kharkov and Belgorod, before the Before the Russians had a chance to strengthen their positions. The operation named 'Citadel' was very important to German fortunes and was to be launched in April but Hitler postponed it until July....the delay was to prove fatal.