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Australians played an important role in North Africa, the Mediterranean area and the Middle East between 1940 and 1942. [MAP OF NORTH AFRICA CAMPAIGN] Royal Australian Navy ships were active in the Mediterranean
against the Italian navy from 1940, and supported Australian troops at
Tobruk. The ships took supplies to the besieged troops by night, frequently
under heavy attack from the German Luftwaffe.
Australian troops had been sent to the Middle East early in
1941. They were very successful in defeating Italian troops at Benghazi, and
Vichy French forces in Syria. The biggest test came against the German
troops who were trying to take the port of Tobruk, a strategically important
area. Allied troops, including many thousands of Australians, dug in and
were able to hold off repeated and determined attacks. The Germans had
contemptuously referred to the defenders as 'rats' in their holes - the
Australians took on this title with pride, and called themselves the 'Rats
of Tobruk'. Australians were prominent also in defeating the Germans at the
Battle of El Alamein in 1942. [MAP OF GREECE/CRETE CAMPAIGN AREA] Australian troops were sent to defend Greece and Crete in 1941, but in a disastrous campaign they were forced to retreat, with the loss of many dead and thousands taken prisoner. [WW2 HISTORY
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