


The Axis capture of Tobruk, also known as the Fall of Tobruk and the Second Battle of Tobruk (17–21 June 1942) was part of the Western Desert campaign in Libya during the Second World War.
The battle was fought by the Panzerarmee Afrika (Armata Corazzata Africa in Italian), a German–Italian military force in North Africa which included the Afrika Korps (Generalleutnant Erwin Rommel), against the British Eighth Army (General Neil Ritchie) which comprised contingents from Britain, India, South Africa and other Allied nations.

Erwin Rommel in the desert.
Axis forces had conducted the Siege of Tobruk for eight months in 1941 before its defenders, who had become an emblem of resistance, were relieved in December.
Claude Auchinleck, the commander-in-chief Middle East Command, had decided not to defend Tobruk for a second time, due to the cost of bringing supplies in by sea; its minefields and barbed wire had been stripped for use in the Gazala Line to the west.
By mid-1942 the Desert Air Force had been forced to move to airfields in Egypt, taking most of them beyond the range of Tobruk.
About a third of all garrison personnel were non-combatant or support troops and many of the fighting troops were inexperienced.
Lieutenant-General William Gott, the commander of XIII Corps, was withdrawn from Tobruk and on 15 June 1942, five days before the Axis attack.
The new commander of the 2nd South African Division, Major-General Hendrik Klopper, was given command of the garrison.
An immense stock of supplies had been accumulated around the port for Operation Acrobat but the Axis had forestalled this with Operation Venice (Unternehmen Venezia) and the Battle of Gazala began on 26 May 1942.
The Eighth Army was defeated in the Battle of Gazala and was driven eastwards toward the Egyptian border, leaving Tobruk isolated.
The Prime Minister, Winston Churchill, placed great store on the symbolic value of Tobruk; an exchange of ambiguous signals between Churchill and Auchinleck led to the garrison being surrounded, rather than evacuated as intended.
On 20 June the Panzerarmee Afrika attacked Tobruk with massed air support, penetrated a weak spot on the eastern defensive perimeter and captured the port.
Much of the garrison on the western perimeter had not been attacked but they were cut off from their supplies and transport, without the means to escape from Tobruk.
The majority had to surrender and 33,000 prisoners were taken.
The surrender was the second-largest capitulation by the British Army in the war, after the fall of Singapore in February 1942.
The loss of Tobruk came as a severe blow to the British leadership and precipitated a political crisis in Britain.
The United States expedited the dispatch of supplies and equipment to the Middle East.
Rommel persuaded the Axis commanders that the supplies captured at Tobruk and the disorganised state of the British forces would enable the Axis easily to occupy Egypt and the Suez Canal.
Operation Herkules, the Axis invasion of the island of Malta, was postponed and the Axis air forces instead supported the pursuit into Egypt, which suffered severe supply constraints as the Panzerarmee Afrika receded from its bases.
The Axis advance was halted at the First Battle of Alamein in July 1942.
A British Court of Inquiry was held in absentia later in the year, which exonerated Klopper and ascribed the defeat to failures among the British high command.
Only seven copies of the verdict were circulated, one being transmitted to General Jan Smuts on 2 October 1942.
The findings were kept secret until after the war, which did little to restore the reputation of Klopper or his troops.
.
Map of the situation in 1942
And now the stamps from AOI (Africa Orientale Italliana)

MNH

Overprint "Tobruch 21-06-1942 XX" refers to the Second Battle of Tobruk (June 1942) during WWII, when Axis forces (German and Italian) captured the strategic Libyan port city. This event was celebrated on a special, often propaganda-related, Italian stamp (AOI series) with a hand-stamped overprint and a British "Army Signals" cancellation stamp. It is a collector's item that was not actually mailed, but served as propaganda.
My father was in the 8th. army in Egypt at this time, he served with the 9th. Lancers.

Wow... that's wild Vic. Would he have been from England at that point? I'm assuming there were no Canadians in that group..
He was in France 21/5/1941; Uk 17/6/1941:Left UK 25/9/1941: arrived Egypt 23/11/1941.
I recall from memory that he went down with Malaria as he spoke about quinine injections to the abdomen. This was probably the hospitalisation 25/9/1942 that shows on his record card.
He went to Italy subsequently and was photographed in a gondola at some point as we have a copy photo, I think also showing the Bridge of Sighs.
Edit. The Malaria was in fact in 1925 in Palestine. He also served in India 1927-31. So his hospital visit in 1942 was for something else. not noted on his war record.
See the 1978-1982 series of se-tenant stamps issued by Libya to commemorate the various battles of WWi, WWii as well as civil war and more recent conflicts. Tobruk is depicted in Scott #930 issued in 1981.
One forgets how brutal and bloody the N. Africa war theater had been!
rrr

The story below is about the second attack on Tobruk in 1942 and is actually in the wrong thread.
But because it was carried out by the Axis troops (German and Italian) with the famous General Rommel at their command, I have posted it here anyway.

re: Axis capture of Tobruk or second battle of tobruk
The Axis capture of Tobruk, also known as the Fall of Tobruk and the Second Battle of Tobruk (17–21 June 1942) was part of the Western Desert campaign in Libya during the Second World War.
The battle was fought by the Panzerarmee Afrika (Armata Corazzata Africa in Italian), a German–Italian military force in North Africa which included the Afrika Korps (Generalleutnant Erwin Rommel), against the British Eighth Army (General Neil Ritchie) which comprised contingents from Britain, India, South Africa and other Allied nations.

Erwin Rommel in the desert.
Axis forces had conducted the Siege of Tobruk for eight months in 1941 before its defenders, who had become an emblem of resistance, were relieved in December.
Claude Auchinleck, the commander-in-chief Middle East Command, had decided not to defend Tobruk for a second time, due to the cost of bringing supplies in by sea; its minefields and barbed wire had been stripped for use in the Gazala Line to the west.
By mid-1942 the Desert Air Force had been forced to move to airfields in Egypt, taking most of them beyond the range of Tobruk.
About a third of all garrison personnel were non-combatant or support troops and many of the fighting troops were inexperienced.
Lieutenant-General William Gott, the commander of XIII Corps, was withdrawn from Tobruk and on 15 June 1942, five days before the Axis attack.
The new commander of the 2nd South African Division, Major-General Hendrik Klopper, was given command of the garrison.
An immense stock of supplies had been accumulated around the port for Operation Acrobat but the Axis had forestalled this with Operation Venice (Unternehmen Venezia) and the Battle of Gazala began on 26 May 1942.
The Eighth Army was defeated in the Battle of Gazala and was driven eastwards toward the Egyptian border, leaving Tobruk isolated.
The Prime Minister, Winston Churchill, placed great store on the symbolic value of Tobruk; an exchange of ambiguous signals between Churchill and Auchinleck led to the garrison being surrounded, rather than evacuated as intended.
On 20 June the Panzerarmee Afrika attacked Tobruk with massed air support, penetrated a weak spot on the eastern defensive perimeter and captured the port.
Much of the garrison on the western perimeter had not been attacked but they were cut off from their supplies and transport, without the means to escape from Tobruk.
The majority had to surrender and 33,000 prisoners were taken.
The surrender was the second-largest capitulation by the British Army in the war, after the fall of Singapore in February 1942.
The loss of Tobruk came as a severe blow to the British leadership and precipitated a political crisis in Britain.
The United States expedited the dispatch of supplies and equipment to the Middle East.
Rommel persuaded the Axis commanders that the supplies captured at Tobruk and the disorganised state of the British forces would enable the Axis easily to occupy Egypt and the Suez Canal.
Operation Herkules, the Axis invasion of the island of Malta, was postponed and the Axis air forces instead supported the pursuit into Egypt, which suffered severe supply constraints as the Panzerarmee Afrika receded from its bases.
The Axis advance was halted at the First Battle of Alamein in July 1942.
A British Court of Inquiry was held in absentia later in the year, which exonerated Klopper and ascribed the defeat to failures among the British high command.
Only seven copies of the verdict were circulated, one being transmitted to General Jan Smuts on 2 October 1942.
The findings were kept secret until after the war, which did little to restore the reputation of Klopper or his troops.
.
Map of the situation in 1942

re: Axis capture of Tobruk or second battle of tobruk
And now the stamps from AOI (Africa Orientale Italliana)

MNH

Overprint "Tobruch 21-06-1942 XX" refers to the Second Battle of Tobruk (June 1942) during WWII, when Axis forces (German and Italian) captured the strategic Libyan port city. This event was celebrated on a special, often propaganda-related, Italian stamp (AOI series) with a hand-stamped overprint and a British "Army Signals" cancellation stamp. It is a collector's item that was not actually mailed, but served as propaganda.

re: Axis capture of Tobruk or second battle of tobruk
My father was in the 8th. army in Egypt at this time, he served with the 9th. Lancers.


re: Axis capture of Tobruk or second battle of tobruk
Wow... that's wild Vic. Would he have been from England at that point? I'm assuming there were no Canadians in that group..

re: Axis capture of Tobruk or second battle of tobruk
He was in France 21/5/1941; Uk 17/6/1941:Left UK 25/9/1941: arrived Egypt 23/11/1941.
I recall from memory that he went down with Malaria as he spoke about quinine injections to the abdomen. This was probably the hospitalisation 25/9/1942 that shows on his record card.
He went to Italy subsequently and was photographed in a gondola at some point as we have a copy photo, I think also showing the Bridge of Sighs.
Edit. The Malaria was in fact in 1925 in Palestine. He also served in India 1927-31. So his hospital visit in 1942 was for something else. not noted on his war record.

re: Axis capture of Tobruk or second battle of tobruk
See the 1978-1982 series of se-tenant stamps issued by Libya to commemorate the various battles of WWi, WWii as well as civil war and more recent conflicts. Tobruk is depicted in Scott #930 issued in 1981.
One forgets how brutal and bloody the N. Africa war theater had been!
rrr