Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Battle of Kasserine Pass

Episode Date: February 19, 2026

In February 1943, the United States Army saw its first major battle of World War II.They confronted the German Afrika Korps in the mountains of Tunisia at Kasserine Pass. It was, to put it bluntly, a... disaster and one of the most humiliating defeats in the history of the American Military. However, in the aftermath of the defeat, the Americans shocked everyone by completely turning things around in just a matter of weeks.Learn more about the Kasserine Pass and the American Army’s baptism by fire on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! Mint Mobile Get your 3-month Unlimited wireless plan for just 15 bucks a month at mintmobile.com/eed Subscribe to the podcast!  https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Austin Oetken & Cameron Kieffer   Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Discord Server: https://discord.gg/Ds7Rx7jvPJ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/  Disce aliquid novi cotidie Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 In February 1943, the United States Army saw its first major battle of World War II. They confronted the German Africa Corps in the mountains of Tunisia at Cazarin Pass. It was, to put it bluntly, a disaster in one of the most humiliating defeats in the history of the American military. However, in the aftermath of the defeat, the Americans shocked everyone by completely turning things around in just a matter of weeks. Learn more about the Battle of Cazarin Pass and the American Army's baptism by fire. on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Fear is the virus is trending on TikTok. Vaccines are poison.
Starting point is 00:00:50 Then your yoga teacher says that sex traffic children are being sacrificed by satanic liberals, but it's all okay. The Great Awakening is coming. What is happening? Every week on Conspiruality Podcast, we explore the fever dreams that suck friends, family, and wellness gurus down the right-wing cult spiral in a search for salvation. To understand the debacle at Kazarin Pass, we need to go back to before the war began,
Starting point is 00:01:24 and even to the country's founding. The United States never had a great land army. Other than the American Civil War and the First World War, when large armies were briefly assembled, the United States always had one of the smaller armies for a country of its size and economy. The nation viewed itself as a naval power given its location between two oceans, and there was little need for a major land force that could be used in North America. When the U.S. entered World War I, it once again assembled a large army quickly. However, after 1918, the U.S. demobilized the army with extraordinary speed.
Starting point is 00:02:01 The wartime army of 4 million shrank to roughly 200,000 by the early 1920s. The political mood favored isolationism and fiscal restraint. The National Defense Act of 1920 reorganized the army into a small regular army, a National Guard component and an organized reserve, but Congress consistently underfunded it. Mechanization lagged and modern tanks, artillery, and aircraft were scarce. In 1939, on the eve of World War II, the U.S. Army ranked 17th in the world in size, behind Portugal. It was smaller than the armies of Romania and Bulgaria. Its officer corps contained talented individuals, but many had never commanded large formations in combat.
Starting point is 00:02:46 All of this became relevant when the Americans landed in Morocco in November of 1942 for Operation Torch, which began the American North African campaign, which I covered in a previous episode. The Germans entered the Tunisian campaign with undisguised contempt for American military capability, an attitude shaped partly by ideological assumptions about democratic societies, and partially by the early evidence of American performance in the torch landings, which had been technically clumsy. General Hans Jürgen von Arnhem's assessment shared widely among German commanders was that American soldiers were physically soft, that their officers were incompetent, and that they would not
Starting point is 00:03:27 fight when pressed. Field Marshal Irwin Rommel, after observing the early fighting, wrote that the Americans, quote, were fantastically cowardly in his personal notes, though he added the important qualification that they learned quickly and that their equipment and logistics were formidable. After the American landings, the Germans had retreated to defensive positions in the mountains of Tunisia. The place where the Americans finally entered combat was Kazarin Pass, a two-mile-wide gap in the dorsal mountains of Central Tunisia. The Battle of Kazerine Pass unfolded between February 19th and February 24, 1943, when German forces under Erwin Rommel struck the U.S. Second Corps positioned in Central Tunisia.
Starting point is 00:04:12 The battle was a disaster for the Americans. American units spread thinly across wide fronts and lacking effective coordination were hit by fast-moving combined arms attacks supported by artillery and airpower. When Rommel's forces swept through the pass, American units disintegrated with surprising speed, abandoning equipment and positions in what veteran German soldiers regarded as a route. German forces exploited gaps, overran defensive positions, and forced a disorderly American retreat westward. Although the Germans ultimately failed to achieve a major breakthrough due to logistical
Starting point is 00:04:50 constraints and growing allied resistance, the battle exposed severe weaknesses in American command, deployment, and battlefield coordination. There were so many problems that it's hard to pinpoint just one as the cause of the debacle. At the leadership level, the fundamental problem was General Lloyd Fredendahl, commander of the Second Corps. Frendall established his headquarters some 70 miles behind the front in an elaborate underground bunker whose construction occupied a significant portion of his engineer battalion for weeks. He communicated through a confusing private system of codenames, issued orders that bypassed division
Starting point is 00:05:30 commanders to deal directly with regiment and even battalion commanders, and demonstrated a near total failure of battlefield situational awareness. He also possessed a correct. He also possessed a a gross of personal contempt for his subordinate commanders, particularly General Orlando War to the First Armored Division, who he actively undermined. Eisenhower's aide, Captain Henry Butcher, recorded that Eisenhower privately expressed serious doubts about Fred and all, even before the battle, yet failed to act on them in time. Below the Army Corps level, the tactical dispositions were equally flawed. American units were scattered across in a broad front in what were called penny packets.
Starting point is 00:06:11 small detachments assigned to defend individual passes in the eastern dorsal mountains, rather than being concentrated for mutual support and counterattack. This approach violated fundamental combined arms doctrine and stripped American commanders of the mass necessary to respond to a concentrated armored thrust. For example, when the German struck at Citi Bowsid on February 14, 1943, several days before the battle, The first armored division's combat command A was destroyed piecemeal, with two relief columns sent in sequentially rather than simultaneously, each in turn overwhelmed by superior German anti-tank fire and coordination. Training deficiencies compounded these leadership problems.
Starting point is 00:06:57 Most American units had received only a few months of training stateside before deployment, and that training had frequently been unrealistic. maneuverers in the Louisiana exercises of 1941 had exposed problems in combined arm coordination, but the lessons had not fully percolated into unit-level practices by the time of Operation Torch. Infantrymen did not know how to work effectively with tanks. Tankers did not understand how to use infantry and artillery to suppress anti-tank guns before closing to engagement range. The performance at Kazarin Pass appeared to confirm German suspicions about the
Starting point is 00:07:34 American military. But the disaster at Cazarin is not the end of the story. What happened next is what made this battle episode worthy. The American response to Cazarin Pass was swift and ultimately highly effective. Eisenhower moved in days to replace General Fred Nall with General George S. Patton, who arrived at Second Corps headquarters on March 6, 1943, and immediately transformed the command atmosphere. Where Fred and all had been remote and contemptuous of his senior officers, Patton was present, demanding, and intensely focused on combat discipline as a proxy for
Starting point is 00:08:14 combat readiness. He enforced uniform regulations with seemingly petty strictness, such as fighting officers for appearing without helmets or neckties, but the underlying purpose was to signal that the era of slack comfortable soldiering was over. His chief of staff, General Omar Bradley, later wrote that Patton slapped the core to attention within days of his arrival. Beyond the change in command style, substantial tactical reforms also followed rapidly. The penny packet defensive positions were abandoned in favor of concentrated mutually supporting positions. Combine arms coordination was enforced through training and by attaching tank destroyer and artillery units more directly to infantry formations. Air ground coordination, which had been
Starting point is 00:09:02 nearly not existent at Kazerine, was systematized under a newly appointed air support commander, Brigadier General Lawrence Cutter, who helped develop the direct support procedures that would become standard doctrine. Only six weeks later, the Americans were able to put these changes to the test when they met the Germans again, at the Battle of El Guatar. The Battle of El Guatar unfolded on March 23, 1943, when German forces launched a deliberate armored attention, against well-prepared American positions, held primarily by the U.S. first infantry division in southern Tunisia. Expecting a counteroffensive after Kazarin, American commanders positioned their troops in depth, with infantry anchoring the line and artillery centrally
Starting point is 00:09:48 controlled behind them. As German tanks advanced through the narrow valley, they were funneled into kill zones and met by concentrated artillery fire supplemented by anti-tank guns and infantry weapons. repeated German assaults were broken up with heavy losses and attempts to exploit gaps failed under sustained fire. It was the first clear American success against German armor in the war. Patton pushed the Corps forward aggressively afterward, and while the terrain and German resistance limited exploitation, Second Corps demonstrated that Kazerine Pass had been an aberration, not a prophecy. The battles of Kazarin Pass and El Guatar were not decisive battles that turned the tide of the war. They're not on a par with the Battle of Stalingrad or D-Day.
Starting point is 00:10:36 However, the battles had extremely important downstream ramifications for how the war was to be conducted over the next two years. Structurally, the army used the Tunisian campaign to accelerate reforms that had been theoretically understood but not yet institutionalized. The separation of tank destroyer doctrine from armored doctrine was reconsidered. Combined arms task force organization became standard. The Army ground forces under General Leslie McNair accelerated the revision of training programs and the replacement system was reformed to provide combat units with better trained fillers. The personnel consequences were also significant. Fredendahl's relief was not an isolated event.
Starting point is 00:11:19 The Tunisian campaign produced a systematic culling of senior officers who had demonstrated unfitness for command under fire. Eisenhower, who was criticized for failing to relieve Fred Nahl earlier, became more decisive in removing commanders thereafter. The professional culture of the officer corps began to shift towards greater emphasis on results rather than seniority. Psychologically, Kazerine Pass became a reference point against which subsequent American performance was measured
Starting point is 00:11:47 and by which the remarkable speed of the American military learning was demonstrated. Within two years of their worst defeat, the American forces were conducting complex multi-core operations in France and Germany with the sophistication that seemed impossible in the Tunisian mountains. The Battle of El Guatar forced a noticeable shift in German perceptions of the American Army, particularly for Field Marshal Irwin Rommel. After Kazerine, Rommel and other German officers had viewed U.S. forces as inexperienced, poorly led, and tantically clumsy, a judgment reinforced by,
Starting point is 00:12:22 the Americans' early collapse. El Guatar challenged that view. The Germans encountered disciplined defensive positions, well-coordinated artillery, and an ability to absorb armor attacks without panic. German post-battle assessments noted the effectiveness of American artillery control and the speed with which U.S. units had corrected earlier mistakes.
Starting point is 00:12:45 While Rommel still believed American troops lacked the combat instincts of veteran German formations, he no longer regarded them as a soft deployment. and recognize that they were learning at an unusually rapid pace. As for the broader North African campaign, Kazarin Pass ultimately failed to achieve Rommel's strategic objectives. The Allied line had held, the retreat was contained, and within three months, all Axis forces in North Africa had surrendered.
Starting point is 00:13:13 The quarter million prisoners taken in the Tunisian capitulation of May of 1943 represented a strategic catastrophe for Germany and Italy that more than offset whatever tactical embarrassment American forces had suffered in February. The speed of recovery between Cassareen and El Guatar was not accidental. It reflected genuine institutional capacity for self-criticism and adaptation, strong logistical foundations, and at crucial moments, the presence of commanders like George Patton, who understood that armies are made as much by will and discipline as by doctrine and equipment.
Starting point is 00:13:49 The ultimate lesson of February and March, 1943 in Tunisia, was not that American soldiers could not fight. It showed that the Americans had something more powerful than raw fighting ability. They were able to adapt and learn. The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel. The associate producers are Austin Otkin and Cameron Kiefer.
Starting point is 00:14:13 Today's review comes from listener, So Mona on Apple Podcasts in the United States. They write, The banality of you. evil episode. Thank you so much for your wonderful podcast. My 12-year-old and I have enjoyed listening for just over a year. I wanted to share what this particular episode called to mind as I listened. I'm a fan of James Baldwin and his quote about love having never been a popular movement came to mind. This part in particular, quote, walk down the street of any city, any afternoon, and look around
Starting point is 00:14:41 you. What you've got to remember is what you're looking at is also you. Everyone you're looking at is also you. You could be that person. You could be that monster. You could be that monster. You could that cop, and you have to decide in yourself not to be, end quote. I apologize for the length of this review, but it is fueled with gratitude. Well, thanks, Mona. I'm so happy that you and your 12-year-old enjoy the show, and I always appreciate the feedback. Remember, if you leave a review on any of the major podcast apps, you too can have it read on the show.

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