The European theatre of World War II (see World War II in Europe) included North and East Africa. Combat between the Axis and the Allies began in 1940, and the Axis were expelled from the continent in 1943.
| | | | Theatres of World War II:<br>Europe • Africa • China • Pacific |
By the 1930s, most of Africa was divided between the European powers, as colonies and protectorates. See British Empire, French Colonial Empire and Portuguese Empire for the largest players. Italy, Belgium and Spain were also involved, and earlier on Germany, the Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden and the United States had been.
The Italians came late to the "scramble for Africa" in which the European powers divided up the continent, but they did manage to grab Libya in 1911. Ethiopia, which had famously resisted colonial forces, became part of the Italian Empire in 1936. Fascist Italy had an ambition to restore the Roman Empire encircling the Mediterranean Sea.
With the fall of France in June 1940, the French colonies in Africa formally became part of Vichy France, a puppet state of Germany whose capital was Vichy. They never officially joined the Axis, but they did co-operate extensively with Germany. One consequence of this was a British attack on the French naval base at Mers-el-Kebir near Oran, sinking French ships to prevent them falling into German hands.
The film Casablanca takes place in Vichy Africa in this period, specifically in Casablanca, Morocco. Much of the plot revolves around refugees from various parts of Nazi-controlled Europe, en route to neutral Portugal and the United States,
In mid-1940, Mussolini's Fascist Italy joined the war on the German side and there were soon a series of engagements between Italian forces based in their colony of Libya and Commonwealth forces based in Egypt. Toward the end of 1940 the Germans joined in, creating the Afrika Corps under General Erwin Rommel. Rommel was one of the best German generals of this war, in particular a fine tank tactician. He was sometimes called "the desert fox".
The Strait of Gibraltar and the Suez Canal were important for Allied shipping, sometimes called "the lifeline of the empire". One of the main Axis objectives in North Africa was to gain control of the Suez Canal, mainly to prevent the Allies from using it, but also to use it themselves for transportation between Europe and the Pacific theatre. This never happened and the Yanagi missions, where submarines made shipments between Germany and Japan, had to use the much longer Cape Route. The Germans also desired to capture the oil fields of the Middle East.
In North Africa the British fought alongside Commonwealth allies. The largest contingent were ANZACs (Australia and New Zealand Army Corps), some of whom were withdrawn when they were needed nearer home for the Pacific War. There were also many Canadians and some from other countries.
In November 1942, the Allies launched Operation Torch, invading Morocco and Algeria with mainly American troops; the main targets were Casablanca, Oran and Algiers. This was far the largest amphibious assault in history up to that time, and some lessons learned here were applied in the invasion of Normandy later. From then on, Rommel's Afrika Corps was in deep trouble; Commonwealth forces were already advancing on the east, but now there were also Americans attacking on the west.
On 13th May 1943 the last Axis troops in North Africa surrendered, ending the war on the continent. The Allies then used North Africa as a base for invasions of Sicily and then mainland Italy.
South Africa was a self-governing dominion of the British Empire (albeit under white minority rule) since 1931, and supported Britain during the war, though the country also had a strong pro-German movement. This was largely divided along ethnic lines, with most Anglo-South Africans supporting Britain, and most Afrikaners wanting to stay out of the war. See 20th-century South Africa.
South African troops and askaris (native troops with mainly British officers) from Britain's East African colonies did most of the fighting in East Africa. They first prevented Italian expansion south from Ethiopia into the British colony of Kenya and then, working with local patriots, ended Italian rule in Ethiopia.
While the African independence movements already had some support in the 1930s, they were accelerated by the war and its outcome. Many African soldiers fought for Free France and Britain. The Allies' policy from the 1941 Atlantic charter to the foundation of the United Nations, was that colonies should be liberated over time. By 1965, 20 years after the war, most of Africa was independent.