In France, our losses continue to mount. One of the two anti-tank units defending Bordeaux is destroyed, while the AA unit is sunk at sea.
Petedalby is now fully committed in Algeria. Additional German bomber formations are identified operating from Sicily and Tunisia, while the Indian special operations unit is subjected to relentless bombing and repeated attacks by Italian forces. The port of Algiers is bombed and remains closed. I finally decide to land the British Army at Oran, while a second infantry corps remains embarked offshore as a strategic reserve.
September
One of our covering aircraft carriers is badly mauled by Axis naval bombers operating from Tunisia. The carrier crews are exhausted after months of intense aerial combat: two carriers have been reduced to 4 air strength, while the third survives with only 3 air strength remaining. Without a second HQ, I do not dare transfer RAF fighter units from the UK to Africa.
Petedalby is now operating from Tunisia with three tactical bombers and three medium bomber wings. The Indian special operations unit is devastated at Constantine and survives with only 2 strength points remaining. The situation is becoming critical. I transferred the British Army by rail to Algiers. October
October proves to be one of the harshest turns of the entire game for the Allies. The carrier stationed in the port of Oran is spotted by Axis bombers and savaged in the harbor.
At this moment, Petedalby decides to bring the North African adventure to an end by capturing Paris and establishing the Vichy regime. Instantly, every one of my units stationed in Algeria disappears from the map. I had always considered this possibility, although I assumed that the creation of Vichy France would result in the internment of both Axis and Allied forces in the region. That assumption proved entirely wrong
And so ends this chapter on the fall of France. In truth, it was an extraordinarily brutal campaign in which I lost almost every British unit committed to the theater. I managed to save only a single anti-tank unit, while losing one HQ, two AA units, two armies, five infantry corps, the Indian special operations unit, four or five garrisons, and suffering severe damage to two aircraft carriers.
Although I succeeded in delaying the fall of France and indirectly aided the Soviet Union, I remain unconvinced that it was a worthwhile Allied investment. My only hope now is that Operation Barbarossa cannot be launched before late summer 1941…
