The Italian Tenth Army consisted of ten divisions when it attacked Egypt on September 13, 1940. Four infantry divisions and one armored group marched one hundred kilometers in four days and then stopped the offensive once they reached Sidi Barrani. September 13 is the 256th day of the year (257th in leap years). ... 1940 (MCMXL) was a leap year starting on Monday (link will take you to calendar). ... Infantry of the 36th Ulster Division, in the First World War Infantry are soldiers who fight primarily on foot, mainly with small arms and operate within organized military units. ... Sidi Barrani is a village in Egypt, ~95km from the border with Libya, and ~240km from Tobruk. ...
In Operation Compass, the Tenth Army was constantly pushed back into Libya. Many soldiers surrendered once the British troops had them encircled. At the battle of Beda Fomm, most of what was still left of the army was cut off by O'Connor's7th Armoured Division. After a fierce battle the survivors surrendered meaning the end of the Tenth Army. Operation Compass was a World War II Allied military operation in the Western Desert Campaign. ... The Italian Offensive and Operation Compass September 13, 1940 - February 7, 1941 (Click to enlarge) Beda Fomm is a small coastal town in southwestern Cyrenaica, Libya located between the much larger port city Bengazi to its north and the larger town of El Agheila further to the southwest. ... General Sir Richard Nugent OConnor , KT , GCB , GBE , DSO , MC , ADC (August 21, 1889 â June 17, 1981) was a British Army general who commanded the Western Desert Force (WDF) in the early years of World War II. OConnor was the field commander for Operation Compass, in which he... The 7th Armoured Division (known as the Desert Rats) of the British Army was the most famous unit of its type in British service during World War II. It was a regular division in the Middle East, designated the Mobile Division at first, renamed the Armoured Division (Egypt) in September...
The 332nd Infantry Regiment, 83rd Division, with attached medical and supply units, was sent to the Italian front in July 1918 in response to urgent requests from the Italian Government.
Its principal missions were to build up Italian morale and to depress that of the enemy by creating the impression that a large force of Americans had reached that front and was preparing to enter the battle line and to take an active part in the fighting.
It joined in the pursuit of the fleeing Austrians on October 29th as part of the British XIV Corps of the ItalianTenthArmy; the American regiment forming the advance guard of the corps.