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pared the way for the German entry. French troops under General Barre, who was pro-Ally, were ordered out of Tunis, and the city was left defenseless. Later General Barre’s forces joined the Allies, but in the meantime the Germans found airfield and dock facilities ready for their use. On 9 November General Anderson arrived at Algiers to take over command of the British First Army. His plan was to seize all ports and airfields to the east (Bougie, Djidjelli, Philippeville, Bone, and La Calle) as rapidly as possible and then to rush his forces forward by motor transport, landing craft, and troop-carrying aircraft. The port of Bougie and the airfield at Djidjelli were the first objectives. The floating reserve of the Eastern Task Force, part of the British 78th Division, was still aboard ships at Algiers. It sailed on the evening of 10 November to take the first objectives of the eastward drive. The capture of Bougie on 11 November was unopposed, but because of bad surf conditions the force was unable to take the Djidï؟¾jelli airfield until the 13th. During this interim lack of adequate land-based air cover permitted the Germans to bomb Bougie harbor, where they damaged a British aircraft carrier. Bone was occupied on 12 November by two companies of a British parachute battalion dropped from C-47’s of the American 65th Carï؟¾rier Command and a British Commando battalion brought in by water. The only Axis opposition to this move was a heavy raid on the airfield that night. The build-up of troops in the Bone area conï؟¾tinued as rapidly as possible, air, sea, rail, and vehicular transporï؟¾tation being utilized. The advance to the east was pressed, and by 15 November leading elements of the 36th Brigade of the 78th Diviï؟¾sion had occupied Tabarka, only eighty miles from Tunis. A British paratroop battalion which had been dropped at Souk el Arba on the 16th had moved beyond Beja by the 17th, and the troops at Tabarka had advanced to Djebel Abiod. At the same time the Allies were securing airfields to the south. On 15 November Colonel Edson D. Raff’s 503d Parachute Battalion, an American unit, dropped at Youks les Bains and two days later occupied the Gafsa airfield, far to the south. It sent patrols over the entire southern area, meeting only small Italian forces. Raff Force, as it came to be known, established cordial relations with the French garrison at Tebessa, which promptly began cooperating with the Americans in patrolling the area. Evidence of French cooperation appeared on 16 November, when reports were received of French and German patrols clashing in the Beja-Debjel Abiod-Mateur area. Although General Barre had been negotiating with the Germans since their arrival, the advance of the |
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