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Operation Brevity

Operation Brevity
Part of the Western Desert Campaign of the Second World War
BattleaxeContestedArea.svg
The Egyptian and Libyan border over which Operation Brevity was conducted.
Date 15–16 May 1941
Location Egyptian and Libyan border
31°34′51″N 25°03′08″E / 31.58083°N 25.05222°E / 31.58083; 25.05222Coordinates: 31°34′51″N 25°03′08″E / 31.58083°N 25.05222°E / 31.58083; 25.05222
Result Inconclusive
Belligerents
 United Kingdom
 Australia
 Germany
Italy Italy
Commanders and leaders
United Kingdom Archibald Wavell
United Kingdom William Gott
Nazi Germany Erwin Rommel
Germany Maximilian von Herff
Strength
3 infantry battalions
53 tanks
Elements of several battalions
30–50 tanks
Casualties and losses
206+ casualties
5 tanks destroyed
6 aircraft destroyed
605+ casualties
3 tanks destroyed

Operation Brevity was a limited offensive conducted in mid-May 1941, during the Western Desert Campaign of the Second World War. Conceived by the commander-in-chief of the British Middle East Command, General Archibald Wavell, Brevity was intended to be a rapid blow against weak Axis front-line forces in the SollumCapuzzoBardia area of the border between Egypt and Libya. Although the operation got off to a promising start, throwing the Axis high command into confusion, most of its early gains were lost to local counter-attacks, and with German reinforcements being rushed to the front the operation was called off after one day.

Egypt had been invaded by Libyan-based Italian forces in September 1940, but by February of the following year a British counter-offensive had advanced well into Libya, destroying the Italian Tenth Army in the process. British attention then shifted to Greece, which was under the threat of Axis invasion. While Allied divisions were being diverted from North Africa, the Italians reinforced their positions and were supported by the arrival of the German Afrika Korps under General Erwin Rommel. Rapidly taking the offensive against his distracted and over-stretched opponent, by April 1941 Rommel had driven the British and Commonwealth forces in Cyrenaica back across the Egyptian border. Although the battlefront now lay in the border area, the port city of Tobruk—100 miles (160 km) inside Libya—had resisted the Axis advance, and its substantial Australian and British garrison constituted a significant threat to Rommel's lengthy supply chain. He therefore committed his main strength to besieging the city, leaving the front line only thinly held.


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