This week the Allies offered Hitler a second front. More important, the offer was made on terms which made it very nearly as painful for him to refuse as to accept.
Just at the time when Rommel's remnants were fleeing before the British in Egypt (see p. 27), U.S. troops landed along the whole coast line of Vichy Morocco and Algeria. Instantly Hitler's already serious problem of trying to keep an Axis foothold in Africa became just twice as serious.
In his broadcast from Munich (see p. 36) Hitler virtually confessed that he could not now meet the danger in Africa itself. He all but said that North Africa for the present must go by default to the Allies. The only alternative for himand it may not be physically possiblewill be to strip Europe of large numbers of Nazi troops, equipment and planes, both to reinforce Rommel and to form a new front in French Africa, perhaps to attack Gibraltar through Spain.
But Hitler did not tell his people what it will cost the Nazi cause to allow the Allies to gain undisputed possession of Vichy Africa. If that object is achieved and its achievement may be far from easythe good points of the Allied strategy are:
>The whole Axis foothold in Africa is likely to collapse. Allied troops can attack Triopoli by the easy route from Tunis. In that event Rommel, running before the British, cannot use the 600 miles of virtually waterless desert between Bengasi and Tripoli as a refuge in which to recover his strengthas he did last year.
>If Africa lost to the Axis one prong of the pincers (the other is in Russia) with which the Axis was preparing to pinch off the whole Middle East will have been destroyed.
>With the airports of French North Africa in Allied hands, land-based Allied planes will be able to defend British convoys headed eastward through the Mediterranean. With the rail and highway route from Casablanca to Tunis, the Allies will not need Mediterranean convoys even fighters can be flown to Malta and Egypt by easy stages.
>Whether by using land transport or making it safe to send their convoys through the Mediterranean, the Allies will save a 12,000-mile voyage around Africa for troops and supplies. From a military standpoint, this saving will be the equivalent of raising hundreds of ships that Hitler's U-boats have already sunk.
>Allied bases along the North African coast will place Germany's advanced Mediterranean bases in Sardinia, Sicily and Crete in immediate danger. The Axis' entire Mediterranean coast line may soon be bombed and raided; almost certainly, it will eventually be invaded.
>There will be an end to Hitler's holding one front with a minimum number of men and machines while he fights on the other. If the Allies consolidate their hold on North Africa, the Axis will be subject to attack from Sicily to Murmansk: Hitler will have 10,000 miles of front to man and protect.
