52 AA Brigade was one of four AA brigade HQs assigned to
First Army for the landings in North Africa (
Operation Torch).
22 AA Brigade had units fully trained in amphibious operations and mobile warfare and would land in the assault phase of the operation, followed by 52 AA Bde. After covering the landing beaches, ports and airfields, the two brigades would then follow First Army's advance eastwards, leaving the other brigades to cover the bases in the rear. After sailing in convoy from the Clyde in late October, the invasion force began landing on 8 November, with
V Corps of First Army landing round
Algiers. After the initial landings were complete, V Corps sent a series of infantry and commando groups eastwards on 9 November and 52 AA Bde HQ landed under
Brigadier John Ross. Leaving three HAA and three LAA batteries to unload and set up an 'Inner Artillery Zone' (IAZ) around Algiers, 22 and 52 AA Bdes began a long march eastwards. Reinforcing AA units were held up by congestion in Algiers docks (the tactical priorities laid down by the AA brigades had been ignored in loading the ships), and some AA units went by sea direct to
Bougie. Others suffered losses of men and equipment in torpedoed ships. By 12 November V Corps' leading troops had covered . The need to get AA units forward quickly to protect the vital airfields had been foreseen, and three of the HAA regiments deployed in the operation (
58th (Kent),
71st (Forth) and
80th (Berkshire) HAA Rgts) had been deliberately equipped with obsolescent
3-inch 20 cwt guns rather than modern
3.7-inch guns, because the former were lighter and handier, and were quicker to deploy in rough country. This paid off when the light HAA and LAA guns were able to deploy and drive off
Junkers Ju 87 Stukas as they deployed at
Djidjelli and
Philippeville airfields. As the
Tunisian Campaign developed, forward movement was slowed by terrain and shortages: most units in 'Torch' had only 50 per cent of their vehicle establishment, and AA units frequently had to lend theirs to other units for urgent transport tasks. By the end of November the AA deployment had reached planned levels, but V Corps' advance had been held by the rapid arrival of German forces. As the Allies built up strength for a renewed advance, the emphasis for the AA units turned to defence for the ports and airfields against heavy attacks by the
Luftwaffe. By January the arrival of reinforcements allowed 22 AA Bde to be fully committed to airfield defence, while 52 AA Bde provided front line support for V Corps and was prepared to follow up any breakthrough towards
Tunis. By mid-January 1943, 52 AA Bde was deployed as follows: • Bougie port: Bty 58th (Kent) HAA Rgt, Bty
76th (Gloucestershire) HAA Rgt, 'V' AA Operations Room (AAOR) •
Constantine airfield: Bty
72nd (Hampshire) HAA Rgt • Djidjelli airfield: Bty 71st (Forth) HAA Rgt •
Philippeville port and airfield: Bty 72nd HAA Rgt, Trp 71st HAA Rgt •
Youks-les-Bains Airfield: Bty 72nd HAA Rgt •
Thelepte Airfield: Bty 72nd HAA Rgt •
Ain Beida Airfield: Trp 71st HAA Rgt • One
US Army AA Artillery/Coastal Artillery battalion also under command The policy of forward deployment paid off: when General
von Arnim launched a counter-offensive against V Corps in February (
Operation Ochsenkopf), 52 AA Bde was able to provide 32 HAA and over 200 LAA guns to cover the combat zone, while transferring 24 HAA and 72 LAA guns to the
Free French XIX Corps. Behind,
62 AA Bde moved up to relieve 52 AA Bde of responsibility for Bougie and Djidjelli. By mid-March 1943, 52 AA Bde was deployed as follows: • Forward areas: 2 Btys 80th (Berkshire) HAA Rgt • Philippeville: 79th HAA Rgt, Bty
64th LAA Rgt, 567 S/L Bty from
30th (Surrey) S/L Rgt • Youks le Bains: Bty 71st HAA Rgt, Bty
29th LAA Rgt •
Tebessa Airfield: 1 Btys 72nd HAA Rgt, Bty
63rd LAA Rgt • Constantine: Trp 72nd HAA Rgt • Ain Beida: Bty 71st HAA Rgt As the fighting continued in April, the HAA guns in forward positions were increasingly used to fire on ground targets to supplement the medium artillery. In one week, 20–27 April, 72nd HAA Rgt shot down seven enemy aircraft for the expenditure of 1022 rounds, but fired many more low-angle rounds at ground targets, which damaged the elevating and balancing gear of the 3.7-inch guns. Meanwhile the LAA guns were in frequent action against
Stuka dive-bombers and low-level attacks by
Messerschmitt Bf 109s. By the beginning of May, First Army was ready for its final assault on Tunis,
Operation Vulcan. The AA plan or 'Vulcan' was straightforward: 52 AA Bde would hold three HAA and three LAA regiments, a S/L troop and a
Z battery of rocket-launchers, all on their wheels and ready to move into Tunis and
Bizerte immediately behind the leading battle groups. DElayed by a German counter-attack, the assault went in on 6 May and covered on the first day. The leading British armoured units entered Tunis on the afternoon of 7 May while US units entered Bizerte simultaneously. After a series of conflicting reports from the cities, 52 AA Bde was called forward. In fact, neither Tunis nor Bizerte was clear of the enemy. At Bizerte the AA advance parties were shelled from outside the town, and two batteries of 29th LAA Rgt had to be employed as infantry to flush out resistance. After Operation Vulcan, 52 AA Bde deployed the following forces: • Bizerte: 58th HAA Rgt, 29th LAA Rgt, 184 Z Bty, detachment 30th S/L Rgt, AAOR • Tunis: 72nd HAA Rgt,
45th LAA Rgt, HQ and one Bty 30th S/L Rgt, AAOR After the German surrender on 12 May, the British forces' heaviest AA commitment was at Bizerte which was set up as an IAZ because of its importance as an embarkation port for the forthcoming
Allied invasion of Sicily (Operation Husky). No sooner had 58th (Kent) HAA Rgt deployed in Bizerte than it was relieved by (being relieved by
84th (Middlesex, London Transport) HAA Rgt) and sent as part of the invasion force for
Pantelleria (
Operation Corkscrew). The rest of the front line AA units that had fought through the Tunisian campaign were able to be relieved for rest and refitting, and training for Husky. ==Italian Campaign==