troops across the Atlantic was successful.
and 1,000 planes, arrived at their rendezvous point near Gibraltar.
Undetected.
The invasion of western North Africa where territory was
defended not by Italian or German troops, but
by Vichy French Forces who made a deal with Hitler.
of Casablanca. An American fleet of 102 transport ships with 35,000 troops
was accompanied by Navy warships and minesweepers.
They were to be the first to land, and were to
secure three beachheads near Casablanca, Morocco.
at Oran and Algiers beachheads along the Mediterranean Sea.
Warships with aircraft were readied by the Navy and the Army Air Forces;
they would secure Safi harbor south of Casablanca
and then support Infantry landings on all three beaches.
tanks, artillery, and combat supplies onto ramped transport vessels
and prepared to ferry them ashore.
![]() |
| Transfer from ship to landing craft; soldiers climb down a ladder while a crate is lowered by cable, November 8, 1942, Army photo |
geared up with the field
supply belts, weapons,
and backpacks
as they had when training.
and his troops
would now face
their first battle.
of the 35,000
Western Task Force
soldiers.
clambered down ladders
or scaled cargo nets
while crates of
combat equipment
were lowered onto
nearby vessels.
John Edward
and his men
moved from the ship
to a landing craft.
the craft left ship side and crested its first wave.
many of the small vessels immediately faced waters
that rose and crashed over them.
![]() |
| Landing craft and ship near Safi, November 8, 1942, National Archives |
Navy destroyers and minesweepers.
offshore. Another 15-20 minutes away.
The first wave of the Western Task Force was ready.
the destroyer-transport USS Bernadou led the way.
air or naval bombardments:
Gen. Eisenhower had ordered Americans
not to fire unless fired upon.
Following months of Allied Intelligence among the Vichy French,
stationed in North Africa, it was just possible that their Navy would give
no more than token resistance and then join the Allies.
full-speed toward the boom, the harbor's steel-mesh defense barrier.
With her machine guns and anti-aircraft guns
sweeping the Safi docks, the Captain
rammed the ship into the sand and beached there.
landing net and set off for their counter-sabotage work in Safi.
The remaining infantry units on that ship immediately followed.
soon pushed back. But then sniper fire began.
early dawn darkness and cloud cover, aircraft began to take off.
24 bombers and fighter planes supported the remaining
35,000 troops
as they approached the beachheads.
troops waded in from their boats.
![]() |
| Infantry land on a beachhead near Casablanca; there is a tank in back left and a ramped landing craft in center; November 8, 1942, National Archives |
Naval and ground fighting continued throughout the morning.
However, Gen. Patton wrote in his diary that day:
had laid a solid foundation for cooperation with the Vichy French.
Both officers and soldiers were reluctant to fight troops
they saw more as liberators than enemies.
![]() |
| Ammunition for light guns unloaded from a landing craft, November 8, 1942, Navy photo |
were ferried to the northern and southern beachheads.
They were secured some 5,000 yards by evening.
of the Western Task Force.
or damaged over 100 boats when winds
and waves capsized or crashed them onto rocky beaches.
along the Mediterranean Coast near Oran and Algeria.
Near Oran, the Central Task Force faced French Vichy defenses
for two days before the city was captured.
The Eastern Task Force landings near Algiers, however, faced little opposition.
Free French and Algerian resistance forces who had infiltrated
the area were soon helping unload weapons and supplies,
and the city was under Allied control by nightfall.
Land battles, however, continued throughout the next two days.
on the capture of Casablanca.
Lt. John Edward and his men landed
on one of those three beachheads near Casablanca:
--John Edward Binnion Military History, ca 1998
where the mass of support vehicles, equipment, and supplies
were to be delivered by the Quartermaster Corps.
These accompanied the bulk of the infantry, who were
also to land at Fedala and then march on the city of Casablanca.
those troops were ashore,
and even less of the combat cargo.
![]() |
| Soldiers guard a transport craft stuck in sand on the Fedala rocky shoreline, November 8-9, 1942 Army photo |
amidst a number of the landing craft stuck in the sand.
For those who had landed, it was a couple of cold damp nights.
detritus for improvised blanket-warmth on the beach.
consolidating the combat equipment and supplies, and
organizing trucks and jeeps as they landed.
on the 10th. They were prepared to attack on the 11th, but the city
surrendered first. Later that day an armistice was signed.
![]() |
| With an armistice signed, U.S. Army tank peacefully drives into Casablanca, November 11, 1942, National Archives |
With the successful launch of Operation Torch,
there were a number of strategic advantages for the Allies.
They now controlled trade and transport
throughout the Mediterranean Sea -- essential for the upcoming European Campaign.
And from Northeastern North Africa, where they would soon march to take
Tunisia, they would be in position to invade Sicily.
From there, they would enter the European Campaign
through Italy, "the soft underbelly of Europe."
British Prime Minister Winston Churchill famously coined such expressions.
Regarding Operation Torch, the beginning of the North African Campaign, he said:
"Now this is not the end.
It is not even the beginning to the end.
But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning."
*More information can be found in Operation Torch, prepared by the US Navy.
Additional background and stories are readily available on sites such as
the National Army Museum or the Warfare History Network.
Thanks for reading.
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