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<blockquote data-quote="emilioteles" data-source="post: 1818304" data-attributes="member: 3144"><p><img src="https://scontent-gru1-1.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xtf1/v/l/t1.0-9/11407052_723517114444750_2462208087423572690_n.png?oh=894d685d39ea4ef81b49b2df3c1208f3&oe=5629AA47" alt="" class="fr-fic fr-dii fr-draggable " style="" /> </p><p>Major General Erwin Rommel, and an early Panzer IV (Nº321) of the 7th Panzer Division in France, May 1940.</p><p></p><p>Erwin Rommel, is pictured here with his Leica III rangefinder camera. Rommel is reported to have been given such a camera by his friend/patron, Joseph Goebbels, before the 1940 Western campaign; many 'photos of his authorship or probable authorship survive, and crop up with a fair degree of frequency in propaganda/publicity contexts.</p><p></p><p>Rommel and the German 7th Panzer division in France 1940 </p><p>He was given the command in the place of the both older and more experienced commanders. </p><p>Inevitably, any account of the German 7th Panzer Division’s actions in France, 1940, to a large extent involves Erwin Rommel. Nevertheless, Rommel often showed audacity and never hesitated to take command of a situation no matter how big or small. He was a man of action, and it seems that he often reacted in a spontaneous and somewhat impulsive manner. His style of command and personality characterized much of the actions of the division. </p><p></p><p>At the time of the campaign in France, Germany did not possess an overwhelming military strength. The Germans had 135 divisions compared to 151 for the allied side. Germany had some 2500 tanks while the allies had more than 4000. The German tanks were not technically superior to those of the allies. Only in the air did the Germans have superiority both in </p><p>numbers of aircraft and in their technical performance.</p><p>The German superiority, instead, lay in their tactics with narrow and deep penetrations. The Germans only had 10 Panzer Divisions, but they were used with a devastating effect when they were concentrated on a narrow front.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="emilioteles, post: 1818304, member: 3144"] [IMG]https://scontent-gru1-1.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xtf1/v/l/t1.0-9/11407052_723517114444750_2462208087423572690_n.png?oh=894d685d39ea4ef81b49b2df3c1208f3&oe=5629AA47[/IMG] Major General Erwin Rommel, and an early Panzer IV (Nº321) of the 7th Panzer Division in France, May 1940. Erwin Rommel, is pictured here with his Leica III rangefinder camera. Rommel is reported to have been given such a camera by his friend/patron, Joseph Goebbels, before the 1940 Western campaign; many 'photos of his authorship or probable authorship survive, and crop up with a fair degree of frequency in propaganda/publicity contexts. Rommel and the German 7th Panzer division in France 1940 He was given the command in the place of the both older and more experienced commanders. Inevitably, any account of the German 7th Panzer Division’s actions in France, 1940, to a large extent involves Erwin Rommel. Nevertheless, Rommel often showed audacity and never hesitated to take command of a situation no matter how big or small. He was a man of action, and it seems that he often reacted in a spontaneous and somewhat impulsive manner. His style of command and personality characterized much of the actions of the division. At the time of the campaign in France, Germany did not possess an overwhelming military strength. The Germans had 135 divisions compared to 151 for the allied side. Germany had some 2500 tanks while the allies had more than 4000. The German tanks were not technically superior to those of the allies. Only in the air did the Germans have superiority both in numbers of aircraft and in their technical performance. The German superiority, instead, lay in their tactics with narrow and deep penetrations. The Germans only had 10 Panzer Divisions, but they were used with a devastating effect when they were concentrated on a narrow front. [/QUOTE]
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