Fighting in North Africa in 1942/1943 and the 1943 Casablanca Conference and their Consequences
Cseh, Valentin
2024-02-01T08:16:25Z
2024-02-01T08:16:25Z
2024-01-03
2786-1902
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http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14044/25447
1941 brought a significant change in the course of the Second World War. The German offensive against the Soviets and the Japanese fleet's attack on Pearl Harbor rearranged the balance of power, as the Soviet Union and the United States of America became belligerents. On the eastern battlefield, a bloody fight broke out between the Wehrmacht and the Red Army, while in Africa the German-Italian troops faced off against the British and American units. At the turn of 1942/1943, a turning point occurred in the course of the Second World War both on the eastern battlefield and in Africa, and in 1943, the military formations led by Field Marshal Erwin Rommel had to face the fact that Africa could be permanently lost for the Axis powers
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Fighting in North Africa in 1942/1943 and the 1943 Casablanca Conference and their Consequences
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Open access
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Óbudai Egyetem
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Budapest
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Bánki Donát Gépész és Biztonságtechnikai Mérnöki Kar
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Óbudai Egyetem
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Bölcsészettudományok - történelemtudományok
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French North Africa
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Casablanca
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Casablanca directive
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El-Alamein
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German Africa Corps
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Afrika Korps
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Operation Torch
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Second World War
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Tudományos cikk
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Journal of Central and Eastern European African Studies