<p>During WW2&nbsp;a quarter of a million South Africans joined the Allied cause to fight&nbsp;against the armies of&nbsp;Mussolini and Hitler.&nbsp;Pieces of red coloured material known as the &#39;Red Tabs&#39; and&nbsp;worn on the epaulettes of&nbsp;their uniforms denoted that each one was a volunteer. They pushed the Italian forces out of East Africa and then faced Hitler&#39;s Afrika Korps in&nbsp;the Western Desert. During a&nbsp;little known battle at a stretch of desert called Acroma Keep South African troops held their ground against overwhelming odds. Amidst the&nbsp;action a truce was held between the Germans and the South Africans. It lasted&nbsp;long enough to gather the wounded and the dead. Thereafter&nbsp;the fighting&nbsp;recommenced.&nbsp;Acroma Keep&nbsp;became the last defensive position to fall before Rommel&#39;s forces attacked Tobruk. Ultimately at Tobruk the German army&nbsp;took 33000 prisoners.&nbsp;This book describes many of the battles using personal anecdotes from veteran South African&nbsp;soldiers and is illustrated with&nbsp;dozens of previously unpublished photographs and&nbsp;several informative maps. Presented in a systematic and simplistic format the book would make a vauable asset for the student of the Desert War.</p>
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