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The Bitter Sea: The Struggle for Mastery in the Mediterranean 1935–1949

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2018
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The Bitter Sea: The Struggle for Mastery in the Mediterranean 1935–1949
Simon Ball

A gripping history of the Mediterranean campaigns from the first rumblings of conflict through the Second World War and into the uneasy peace of the late 1940s.The Mediterranean Sea lies at the very heart of recent world history. To the British during the Second World War, the Mediterranean was the world’s great thoroughfare. To the Americans, it represented the answer to anti-imperialism. And to Mussolini, it encapsulated his violent vision of conquest. These three great powers attempted to overthrow the existing order in the Mediterranean, resulting in a collision of allies as well as enemies that hadn’t been seen before: the Germans fought against the Italians, the Americans against the Arabs, the Jews against the British, the French against nearly everyone. The Mediterranean was indeed ‘the bitter sea’.In this masterly history, Simon Ball takes us through the tumultuous events set in motion by Mussolini’s lust for conquest that ended with the creation of Israel. Long drawn-out battles on land, sea and air – dominated by WWII’s most illustrious leaders, Churchill, Eisenhower and Rommel amongst them – resulted in Allied victory in the battle of El Alamein, the terrifying desert campaigns of Africa and the eventual defeat of Italy and then Germany.The wars in the Mediterranean had huge consequences for all those who fought in them, but none more profound than those experienced by the lands, nations and peoples that lived around the sea itself. Based on entirely original research, ‘The Bitter Sea’ is expertly written, utterly compelling and unquestionably important.

THE BITTER SEA

The Struggle for Mastery in the Mediterranean, 1935–1949

SIMON BALL

To Helen

Contents

Cover

Title Page (#u4259c771-3ba2-5933-8bd9-dd4d4c990411)

Dedication (#u0357f14a-e001-5639-be90-4130905ddce7)

Maps (#u57c0f3a6-1d2c-5688-916a-14c3a61d6284)

Introduction (#ub0731663-3c9e-5c60-8066-ea1f614c35d8)

1 The Dead Dog (#uaf5de4f4-1a37-553d-9074-337e4b00ac17)

2 Death on the Nile (#u0574073d-fc08-52cb-899d-fb07e0623484)

3 Of Mice and Men (#uaf27a44b-07f2-5028-bb86-1703468efaf6)

4 Gog & Magog (#ucbce026a-dcf6-51b6-a16e-af433471a6c1)

5 Mediterranean Eden (#u45ad2dae-c00d-567e-9eca-dff4ddf59a44)

6 Losing the Light (#uf10b2eb1-3108-54d1-853f-dff440e3e4bd)

7 Italy Victorious (#litres_trial_promo)

8 The Last Summer (#litres_trial_promo)

9 Of Worms and Frenchmen (#litres_trial_promo)

10 The Deceivers (#litres_trial_promo)

11 The Good Italians (#litres_trial_promo)

12 The Last Supper (#litres_trial_promo)

13 Mission Impossible (#litres_trial_promo)

14 Goodbye Mediterranean (#litres_trial_promo)

Conclusion (#litres_trial_promo)

Notes and References (#litres_trial_promo)

Index (#litres_trial_promo)

Sources and Acknowledgements (#litres_trial_promo)

By the same author (#litres_trial_promo)

Copyright (#litres_trial_promo)

About the Publisher (#litres_trial_promo)

MAPS (#ulink_c2c5316e-ebb7-5375-a578-6c3ab002c0f9)

Map 1 The Mediterranean in 1938 (#ulink_ce604c5e-d94e-54b9-906b-4d23ce09f5df)

Map 2 The Mediterranean and Middle East Theatre of War (#ulink_960595eb-c479-5f0f-91cd-42e82bb824a0)

Map 3 The Sicilian Narrows (#ulink_3633b722-fffc-597a-97f7-238ddb24b205)

Map 4 Malta and the Mediterranean in 1941 (#ulink_c78878d5-cbde-5763-a75a-e527d7e6536e)

Map 5 Cyrenaica (#ulink_ec865828-9bcf-58f0-a150-35d977ea7cec)

Map 6 Greece and the Aegean (#ulink_8d2b544b-f696-5ab2-b2b8-ddca8a280cc7)

Map 7 The Partition of Yugoslavia in 1941 (#ulink_39337e18-8da0-595f-a4a9-fbf996a54401)

Map 8 Axis Sea and Air Transport Routes to North Africa, October 1942–May 1943 (#ulink_0f960c2f-1c67-5ce1-9d71-62b844a851b9)

Map 9 TORCH landings in 1942 (#ulink_b736e58b-f77e-5cec-915a-570acfe20b8f)

Map 10 Italy showing German defensive lines with dates of their fall (#ulink_faf5d7db-d806-59a6-ba1d-61bb54656e06)

INTRODUCTION (#ulink_929cec66-d704-56d0-ba54-05d5c05b4b30)

In July 2008 the Libyan tyrant Muammar Gaddafi announced that he would boycott the inaugural meeting of the Union for the Mediterranean, or ‘Club Med’ as it was invariably known. The President of France, Nicolas Sarkozy, had summoned forty-two Mediterranean leaders to Paris to create the Union. Newly elected, he wanted an alternative to the faltering ‘Barcelona process’ that, since 1995, had been a vehicle for transferring aid from the European Union to the Arab world. Something grander and more heroic was required to capture the imagination of Europe and the Middle East, Sarkozy believed. Gaddafi was appalled. The initial invitation to Club Med, issued in December 2007, was grandly entitled, in the worst possible taste, the ‘Appeal from Rome’. Libya had been created from the ashes of Mussolini’s Roman Empire. Sarkozy had flanked himself with the leaders of Spain and Italy, an echo of the unrealized Mediterranean Axis of 1940. ‘We shall have another Roman Empire and imperialist design,’ Gaddafi snarled from his palace in Tripoli. ‘There are imperialist maps and designs we have already rolled up. We should not have them again.’

(#litres_trial_promo)

This is a book about an idea and its time. The idea was that there was a place called the Mediterranean and that the Mediterranean was worth fighting for. The time was the mid-1930s to the late 1940s.

The existence of the Mediterranean is embedded in the modern imagination.

(#litres_trial_promo) Long before the aeroplane or the satellite created aerial pictures of the Mediterranean, the Victorian art critic John Ruskin urged his reader to rise with him higher than the birds. Together they would see ‘the Mediterranean lying beneath us like an irregular lake, and all its ancient promontories sleeping in the sun’. Beneath them were ‘Syria and Greece, Italy and Spain, laid like pieces of a golden pavement into the sea blue’.
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