By the evening of 10 November 1942, Wehrmacht and
Royal Italian Army forces had completed their preparations for
Case Anton. The
1st Army advanced from the Atlantic coast, parallel to the
France–Spain border, while the
7th Army advanced from central France towards
Vichy and
Toulon, under the command of General
Johannes Blaskowitz. The Italian
4th Army occupied the
French Riviera and an Italian division landed on Corsica. By the evening of 11 November, German tanks had reached the Mediterranean coast. The Germans had planned
Operation Lila to capture intact the demobilised French fleet
at Toulon.
French naval commanders managed to delay the Germans by negotiation and subterfuge long enough to scuttle their ships on 27 November, before German soldiers could seize them, preventing three
battleships, seven
cruisers, 28
destroyers and 20
submarines from falling into the hands of the Axis powers. Despite the disappointment of the German Naval War Staff, Hitler considered that the elimination of the French fleet sealed the success of Operation Anton since the destruction of the fleet denied it to
Charles de Gaulle and the
Free French Navy. Vichy France offered no resistance, contenting itself with a radio broadcast objecting to the violation of the
armistice of 1940. The German government countered that it was the French who violated the armistice first by not offering a determined resistance to the Allied landings in North Africa. The 50,000-strong
Vichy French Army took defensive positions around Toulon, but when confronted by German demands to disband, it did so since it lacked the military capability to resist the forces. == Aftermath ==