ABSTRACT

Fighting Rommel examines how and why some armies innovate under pressure while others do not. Focusing on the learning culture of the British Imperial Forces, it looks at the Allied campaign during the Second World War against the Afrika Korps of Rommel. The volume highlights the hitherto unexplored yet key role of the British Indian Army, the largest volunteer force in the world. It also introduces ‘learning culture’ as a heuristic device. Further, it goes on to analyze military innovation on the battlefield, in victory and defeat.

A major intervention in the study of the Second World War, this book will be indispensable to scholars and researchers of military history, especially British and German, battlefield history, and defence and strategic studies.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|32 pages

Rommel attacks

Battleaxe and lessons learnt

chapter 2|43 pages

Desert Fox contained

Crusader

chapter 3|50 pages

Triumph of the Desert Fox

chapter 4|49 pages

Second and Third Alamein

The two battles that stopped Rommel

chapter 5|43 pages

Endgame in Tunisia

chapter |8 pages

Conclusion