Erwin Rommel was one of Nazi Germany’s most famous field marshals, renowned for his bold command of armored forces during World War II and nicknamed the “Desert Fox” for his campaigns in North Africa. His battlefield successes against British and Allied troops made him a legend in his own time and a central figure in Germany’s early war strategy. Yet Rommel’s complicated legacy—shaped by his association with Adolf Hitler’s regime and his alleged links to a 1944 plot to assassinate Hitler—has kept historians debating his true importance ever since.