In the early hours of February 19, Rommel ordered the
Afrika Korps Assault Group from Feriana to attack the Kasserine Pass. The 21st Panzer Division at Sbeitla was ordered to attack northward through the Sbiba Gap (east of Kasserine) toward Ksour.
Kampfgruppe von Broich, the battlegroup released by von Arnim from 10th Panzer Division, was ordered to concentrate at Sbeitla, where it would be ready to exploit success in either pass.
Sbiba The Sbiba area was attacked by Battle Groups Stenkhoff and Schuette, remnants of the 21st Panzer Division. Facing the German armored advance was the British
6th Armoured Division (less the
26th Armoured Brigade which except for the tanks of the
16/5th Lancers had been sent to Thala). Also in the line was the U.S.
18th Regimental Combat Team from the
1st Infantry Division; and three battalions of infantry from the
34th Infantry Division. There were also three U.S. Field Artillery battalions, elements of two British anti-tank regiments and some French detachments. The Germans made little progress against the combined firepower of the defending force which had also laid minefields. The 21st Panzer Division was checked and then driven back by February 20.
Kasserine tank of U.S. 1st Armored Division advancing to support American forces during the battle at Kasserine Pass Defending the pass was a force consisting of the U.S. 1st Battalion,
26th Regimental Combat Team, the U.S. 19th Combat Engineer Regiment, the
6th Field Artillery Battalion, a tank destroyer battalion and a battery of French artillery. On the hills to their west was French General Welvert's
Task Force Welvert comprising a U.S.
Ranger and infantry battalion, three French infantry battalions, two U.S. field artillery battalions, four French artillery batteries and engineer and anti-aircraft detachments. Furthest west was
Task Force Bowen (consisting of the 3rd Battalion of the 26th Regimental Combat Team), blocking the track from Feriana towards Tebessa. Between
Task Force Bowen and Tebessa to the north was the regrouping 1st Armored Division although only Combat Command B was fit for combat. The positions in the pass had been placed under Colonel Alexander Stark, commander of the 26th RCT, on the night of February 18 and the command named
Stark Force. On the morning of the 19th an attempt by the 33rd Reconnaissance Unit to surprise the Kasserine defenses into the pass failed. A battalion of Panzer grenadiers was then ordered into the floor of the pass and another onto Djebel Semmama (the hill on its eastern flank), and slow progress was made against artillery fire. The tanks of 1/8th Panzer Regiment were committed at noon but little further progress resulted against stubborn defense. Rommel decided to commit his units from the 10th Panzer to the Kasserine Pass the next morning in a coordinated attack with the
Afrika Korps Assault Group, which was to be joined by elements of the Italian
131st Armored Division Centauro. British reinforcements from the 26th Armoured Brigade had been assembling at Thala and Brigadier
Charles Dunphie, making forward reconnaissance, decided to intervene. The First Army headquarters restricted him to sending
Gore Force, a small combined-arms group of a company of infantry, a squadron of 11 tanks, an artillery battery and an anti-tank troop. Brigadier
Cameron Nicholson (6th Armoured Division) was given command of
Nickforce, all units north-west of the pass. During the night, the American positions on the two mountain shoulders overlooking the pass were overrun and at 8:30 am on February 20 German panzer grenadiers and Italian
Bersaglieri resumed the attack. At 10:00 Dunphie judged that
Stark Force was about to give way and ordered
Gore Force to the Thala side of the pass, as elements of the
Centauro Division launched their attack towards Tebessa and continued it during the afternoon. During the opening attack on key American positions at Djebel Chambi, the 5th Bersaglieri Regiment had made a frontal assault on U.S. positions that lasted most of the morning and finally carried the position, losing the regimental commander Colonel Bonfatti in the process. This action cracked open the Allied defenses, opening the road to Thala and Tebessa. By midday the accompanying combined Axis armored units poured through the pass routing U.S. forces of the 1st Armored Division in one of the worst U.S. defeats of the Tunisian Campaign. The Italian regiment was complimented by General
Bülowius, commander of the DAK Assault Group, who cited their action as the instrumental event of the Axis victory. At 13:00 Rommel committed two battalions from 10th Panzer Division, which overcame the northern wing of the Allied defense. Tanks and Bersaglieri from the
Centauro Division advanced along Highway 13 and overran the 19th Combat Engineer Regiment. The U.S. survivors made a disorganized retreat up the western exit from the pass to Djebel el Hamra, where Combat Command B of the 1st Armored Division was arriving. On the exit to Thala,
Gore Force slowly leapfrogged back, losing all its tanks in the process, to rejoin the 26th Armoured Brigade some further back.
Djebel el Ahmar The
Afrika Korps Assault Group began moving along the Hatab River valley towards Haidra and Tebessa in the early afternoon of February 21 and advanced until they met defenders consisting of the U.S. 16th Infantry Regiment of the 1st Infantry Division and Combat Command B of the U.S. 1st Armored Division at Djebel el Hamra. The German–Italian force was halted and, despite heavy pressure including air attacks, failed to dislodge the American defenders. Having brought the Axis drive towards Tebessa to a halt, General
Paul Robinett and General
Terry Allen now turned their attention to planning a counterattack that was to take place the next day, February 22. Plans made by both sides were upset by the battle, and the Axis forces (5th
Bersaglieri, a
Semovente group from
Centauro and 15 Panzer) launched another assault on the U.S. position on the morning of February 22 toward Bou Chebka Pass. Although the American defenders were pressed hard the line held and, by mid-afternoon, the U.S. infantry and tanks launched a counterattack that broke the combined German and Italian force. More than 400 Axis prisoners were taken as the counterattack was pressed into the
Afrika Korps position.
Thala establishing positions on difficult terrain at Thala, February 24, 1943 Rommel had stayed with the main group of the 10th Panzer Division on the route north toward Thala, where the 26th Armoured Brigade and remnants of the U.S. 26th Infantry Regiment had dug in on ridges. If the town fell and the southern of two roads from Thala to Tebessa was cut, the U.S.
9th Infantry Division to the north would be cut off and Combat Command B of the 1st Armored Division would be trapped between the 10th Panzer Division and its supporting units moving north along the second road to Tebessa. The combined force fought a costly delaying action in front of Thala, retreating ridge by ridge to the north until by dark, the force stopped the German attack just south of the town in the evening of February 21. The divisional artillery (48 guns) of the 9th Infantry Division and anti-tank platoons, that had moved from Morocco on February 17, west, dug in that night. Next day, the front was held mostly by British infantry, with exceptionally strong backing by unified U.S. and British artillery, under
brigadier general Stafford LeRoy Irwin, the U.S. artillery commander. The British had 36 guns, supported by armoured cars of the
Derbyshire Yeomanry and Valentine and Crusader tanks of the
17th/21st Lancers. Anderson had ordered the 9th Infantry Division and its artillery support to Le Kef to meet an expected German attack but U.S. Major General
Ernest N. Harmon, who had been sent by Eisenhower to report on the battle and the Allied command, instructed the 9th divisional artillery to stay behind. On the morning of February 22 an intense artillery barrage from the massed Allied guns forestalled the resumption of the 10th Panzer Division attack, destroying armor and vehicles and disrupting communications. Broich, the battle group commander, decided to pause and regroup, but Allied reinforcements continued to arrive. Under constant fire, 10th Panzer waited until dark to retire from the battlefield.
Withdrawal '' assault guns Overextended and with supplies dwindling, pinned down by the Allied artillery in the pass in front of Thala and now facing U.S. counterattacks along the Hatab River, Rommel realized his strength was spent. At Sbiba, along the Hatab River and now at Thala, the efforts of the German and Italian forces had failed to make a decisive break in the Allied line. With little prospect of further success, Rommel judged that it would be wiser to break off to concentrate in South Tunisia and strike a blow at the Eighth Army, catching them off balance while still assembling its forces. He at least had the consolation that he had inflicted heavy losses on his enemy and that the Allied concentrations in the Gafsa – Sbeitla area had been destroyed. At a meeting at Rommel's Kasserine HQ on February 23, Kesselring and his Chief of Staff
Siegfried Westphal tried to change Rommel's mind, arguing that there were still possibilities for success. Rommel was adamant; Kesselring finally agreed and formal orders from the
Comando Supremo in Rome were issued that evening calling off the offensive and directing all Axis units to return to their start positions. On February 23 a massive American air attack on the pass hastened the German retreat and by late February 24 the pass had been reoccupied, Feriana was in Allied hands; Sidi Bou Zid and Sbeitla followed soon after. ==Aftermath==