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WESTERN DESERT (3) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   032321


Alex: the life of Field Marshal Earl Alexander of Tunis / Nicolson, Nigel 1973  Book
Nicolson, Nigel Book
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Publication London, WeidenFeld and Nicolson, 1973.
Description xiii, 346p.: ill., mapshbk
Standard Number 0297765159
Key Words Burma  India  Baltic  Western Desert  Alexander - Biography 
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
011497923.5611/NIC 011497MainOn ShelfGeneral 
2
ID:   155723


Rise of the fighter-bomber in the western desert / Bronk, Justin   Journal Article
Bronk, Justin Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The fighter-bomber rose from obscurity in January 1941 to become the major component of the RAF’s Desert Air Force strike power by late 1942. This was a major shift in the way the RAF employed its aircraft. The tactical and technical factors that led to this change are crucial not only to understanding the course of the Second World War, but also to the history of airpower itself. In this article, Justin Bronk discusses how the fighter-bomber became the most important and practical component in the arsenal of a modern air force in terms of capability to project power on the battlefield.
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3
ID:   123035


Something is wrong with our army…: command, leadership and Italian military failure in the first Libyan campaign, 1940-41 / Stockings, Craig   Journal Article
Stockings, Craig Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract There is no question that the First Libyan Campaign of 1940-41 was a military disaster for Italy. However, for all of the ethnic slurs and cultural stereotyping levelled at Italian military performance in North Africa by historians and popular authors alike, relatively little research effort invested into identifying the real military disadvantages under which Mussolini's soldiers in this theatre fought. When understood as a product of measurable and objective military factors, like the issue of leadership for example, the rout of the 10th Army takes on an entirely new complexion. The subsequent reputation of Italian soldiers as embarrassing battlefield liabilities in the Western Desert in this period is exposed as unfair. This overlooks the handicaps they fought under, and often ignores the bravery displayed in spite of them all. Like the Australians, the Italians in the Western Desert were ordinary men, no more and no less. In truth, it is singularly unsurprising that so many were killed or surrendered without putting up much real resistance. They faced challenges and conditions that would have handicapped troops from any country.
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