Today on Far Future
Horizons to commemorate the seventy-fifth anniversary of Operation Pedestal we
present the BBC Two documentary The Battle for Malta.
Historian James Holland presents a fresh analysis of
the World War Two battle for the tiny Mediterranean island of Malta.
The Battle for Malta is one of the most vicious and
violent episodes of the Second World War. The tiny Mediterranean island is
smaller than the Isle of Wight, yet between 1940 and 1942 more bombs fell on
Malta than fell on Britain during the entire Blitz. As Axis forces threw all
they had at the island, those on Malta were forced to endure a sustained attack
from the air and a rapidly deteriorating condition on the ground. Beyond any
form of austerity that we might understand, little Malta was close to starving.
The struggle of the Maltese people against oppression was recognised personally
by King George VI, who awarded the George Cross to the entire island. Yet the
Siege of Malta is only half of the story.
In this documentary, Holland argues that the real
importance of Malta's position was its offensive role, which has been largely
undervalued.
Caught in the crosshairs of a massive struggle between
Britain and Germany to control the shipping waters of the Mediterranean, by
1942 Malta had become the most bombed place on Earth. Whilst the level of
brutal attacks may seem out of all proportion to the islands size it actually
only serves to underline its importance - for Malta held the key to the entire
war in the Mediterranean and North Africa.
The Battle for Malta
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