‘Our worst nightmares’
The Channel Dash C
HRISTMAS 1941 brought little cheer to the warring nations of the Earth. Germany was shaken to the core by her first defeat in front of Moscow. It cost her a quarter of a million men, many of her senior generals, and above all the Wehrmacht’s aura of invincibility. The Soviet Union could rejoice at throwing the Hun back from the gates of their capital – but her losses in six months of war in men, material and territory were grievous. A European war was now a world war thanks to the actions of Japan. Indeed as 1941 drew to a close, the Shōwa empire seemed to be the only one of the belligerents in the ascendency. Under the banner of the rising sun, her forces swept across South-east Asia and the Pacific. America was still reeling from the blow at Pearl Harbor – a blow compounded by numerous more: Guam, Wake Island, and most recently Manila had all been lost to Tokyo. Nor did the British Empire have much to cheer. London’s fortunes were rapidly approaching their nadir. Hong Kong had just fallen. Prince of Wales and Repulse were at the bottom of the South China Sea. The mother country’s sea lanes were ravaged daily by U-boats and, less frequently, by German surface ships. The only encouragement this third Christmas of the war came from the Western Desert, where the Eighth Army had eliminated the threat to Egypt and lifted the siege of Tobruk. It had, however, failed to destroy Rommel and his vaunted Afrika Korps. In time, Winston Churchill promised members of the US Congress, gathered in the Capitol on Boxing Day, that the Commonwealth armies in North Africa would “beat the life out of the savage Nazi”. In time, too, the British premier assured America’s political leaders, the united nations would defeat the Axis powers – “a group of mighty foes who seek our ruin”. He continued: What kind of a people do they think we are? Is it possible that they do not realize that we shall never cease to persevere against them until they have been taught a lesson which they and the world will never forget? As Winston Churchill addressed the Capitol, 3,600 miles away a naval force of one cruiser, four destroyers and a couple of troop transporters, sailed into the North Sea night. For two days it had sheltered in the Shetlands, but as the Christmas storm abated, so the ships resumed their journey, bound for the small Norwegian island of Vaagsoy. With nearly 600 commandos embarked, the force was charged with knocking out the isolated community’s fish oil factories – used by the Germans to produce explosives – and engage and defeat any enemy troops they might encounter. For 21 dead and three times as many wounded, the Vaagsoy raid – codenamed Operation Archery – succeeded. The small town of Måløy was left in flames, its factories and fish oil stores wrecked, its small German garrison mostly dead or captured. The attack confirmed all of Adolf Hitler’s suspicions. For months he had fretted about his Scandinavian possession and the Vaagsoy raid was clearly the precursor to a large-scale Allied attack on Norway. And so Norway, he determined, needed defending. It needed the bulk of the German Fleet... but the bulk of the German Fleet was still in France. www.navynews.co.uk
● ‘Only those who accept the dangers deserve luck...’ Scharnhorst, escorted by a destroyer, leads Operation Cerberus, February 12 1942
W
ith its vast natural harbour – 70 square miles in all, formed by the convergence of three rivers – and easy access to the Atlantic via the narrow strait, the Goulet, the Breton city of Brest had been a vital naval base since the days of Cardinal Richelieu, home first to the La Royale, and later Marine nationale. In the summer of 1940, came a new inhabitant: the Kriegsmarine, which regarded the port as its greatest prize when France fell to the seemingly-unstoppable German Army. No longer did the great ships of the German Navy have to run the gauntlet of the North Sea between the Shetlands and Norway, or the Iceland Gap. From the Atlantic shores of France, they could strike at the supply lines of the British Empire. Or at least that was how the leaders of the German Navy viewed the ports of France in the summer of 1940. The reality proved to be very different – for the German surface fleet especially. Brest in particular became not a sword lunging into the Atlantic but a sanctuary for German warships escaping the clutches of the Royal Navy. It was to Brest that the sisters Scharnhorst and Gneisenau – the British determined the 38,000-ton leviathans with their nine 11in guns apiece were battle-cruisers, the Germans insisted they were Schlachtschiffe, battleships – had fled after a two-month-long sortie in early 1941. It was for Brest that the damaged Bismarck made in May that year. The torpedo of one Swordfish bomber and the guns of the Home Fleet ensured she never got there – but her escorting heavy cruiser, Prinz Eugen, did reach Brittany.
Picture: Imperial War Museum
As sanctuaries go, Brest proved to be a poor one. It was barely 120 miles from the shores of England – well within striking distance of the RAF. Within eight days of their arrival in Brest, British bombers targeted the Scharnhorst and Gneisenau. The Fleet Air Arm had already damaged Gneisenau as she returned from her sortie. Now the RAF compounded her agony. She was almost sunk by a torpedo strike which earned the pilot, Kenneth Campbell, a posthumous Victoria Cross. Yet more damage was inflicted on the wounded leviathan a few days later. The Scharnhorst survived these raids unscathed – but she was hardly fit for sea, dogged by engineering problems which had hampered her sortie early in 1941 and continued to plague her. It was July 1941 before das glückhafte Schiff – ‘the lucky ship’, a nickname applied not just to Scharnhorst but also the Prinz Eugen and the pocket battleship Admiral Scheer – was able to put to sea once more. After brief trials in the roadstead off Brest, she sailed 200 miles down the coast to La Pallice. Thanks to the French underground resistance, it took the RAF just a day to find her. Five bombs pierced her armoured deck, but only two exploded; the rest simply punched straight through the hull. She returned to Brest – shipping 7,000 tons of Atlantic seawater – and underwent four months of repairs. By then the two sisters had been joined by a third heavy ship, the Prinz Eugen. She had sailed into the commercial port of Brest on the afternoon of June 1. While the Iron Cross was presented to around one fifth of her ship’s company, the 680ft ship was covered with camouflaged netting. She was spared the RAF’s attention
for a month – until the small hours of July 2 when a bomb pierced her armoured deck and exploded deep inside, killing or fatally wounding 60 men and putting the cruiser out of action for three months. While Prinz Eugen was repaired, many of the ship’s company enjoyed leave. Some headed to Locquirec on the north Brittany coast for training as soldiers, others were sent on promotion courses. There were ceremonial days celebrating the deeds of the man for whom the ship was named, Prince Eugene of Savoy, the great 17th and 18th Century commander of the Habsburg armies, scourge of the French and Turks. There were more air raids – 21 sailors were wounded while rescuing Frenchmen buried alive during one attack on Brest – and other dangers in the city. Sailors came under attack from armed members of the French resistance, leading to a ban on officers leaving the ship without pistols. Welders set fire to the camouflage netting which shielded the cruiser from Allied aerial reconnaissance. Elaborate nets were also spread over the two battle-cruisers – from the air they supposedly looked like clusters of trees – while the obsolete French cruiser Jeanne d’Arc was made to look like the Scharnhorst. Kriegsmarine commanders determined the defence of Brest should be “as important as the defence of Wilhelmshaven”. The port was ringed by smoke generators and more than 1,300 anti-aircraft guns, while the naval base and docks were ingeniously camouflaged. Such deception proved largely futile. Aerial photographs of Brest in the autumn of 1941 – more than 700 reconnaissance flights were flown – show the unmistakeable outline of the two sisters in dry dock and the Prinz Eugen alongside a little further to the west.
Royal Air Force ‘visits’ to Brest were an almost daily – and nightly – occurrence. Roughly ten per cent of Bomber Command’s effort was expended attacking the German warships in western France. The RAF made just shy of 300 attacks on the three heavy warships – at a cost of more than 40 aircraft and nearly 250 aircrew. And yet despite the damage British bombs inflicted on the trio, the air attacks couldn’t deliver the knockout blow. There were plans to throw 300 aircraft at Brest in a single night, a seemingly-endless wave of bombers raining high explosive on the ships. There never was such a raid. Instead, the RAF persisted with its smaller-scale attacks on the French port, succeeding in damaging Gneisenau once again on January 6. The damage was relatively minor – a couple of compartments flooded. She would be ready to sail again on February 11. By then the Prinz Eugen and Scharnhorst had also been repaired and were ready for duties. But where? The answer was Norway. Long before commandos had struck at Vaagsoy, Adolf Hitler had been convinced the British would strike at Scandinavia. To the German leader, Norway was a Schicksalszone – ‘zone of destiny’ – to be safeguarded at all costs. Germany had struck north in the spring of 1940 – at the insistence of the Navy, overlooking the small matter of Norwegian independence – to secure iron ore supplies through Narvik. But in seizing Norway, the Kriegsmarine had sacrificed much of its surface fleet. It didn’t have the forces to protect the 1,200-mile sea lane from Narvik to the North Sea coast of the Reich. It certainly didn’t have sufficient forces to guard more
than 15,000 miles of Norwegian coastline. To prove the point British ships, submarines and aircraft were striking at German shipping off the Norwegian coast – if not at will, then certainly regularly. The Kriegsmarine’s commander, Erich Raeder, and his fellow admirals shared Hitler’s fears. Indeed, his commander in Norway, Admiral Hermann Boehm, went so far as to warn that Norway was a “pistol aimed at England’s heart” – and they would do everything in their power to knock it out of Germany’s hand, while his counterpart commanding the Kriegsmarine’s North Sea commander Admiral Rolf Carls warned that the Allies would strike inside the Arctic Circle around the beginning of April. Such ‘threats’, plus the growing convoy traffic between Britain and the Soviet Union had already prompted Raeder to bolster his meagre forces in Norway; he would send the new battleship Tirpitz to Trondheim when she had completed her training. That reinforcement wasn’t enough for Adolf Hitler. “If the British do things properly, they’ll attack northern Norway in several places,” he assured Raeder. There would be an “all-out assault” by the Royal Navy to seize Narvik which could be “of decisive importance for the outcome of the war”. The ‘threat’ to Norway demanded the “use of all the Kriegsmarine’s forces – all battleships and pocket battleships” and that meant transferring the three ships in Brest. The ‘fleet in being’ at Brest served no purpose, Hitler argued. They were like a patient with cancer – “doomed without an operation”. The operation he proposed was a breakout through the Channel – based on past experience the English were “incapable of taking and carrying out lightning decisions”. It was a gamble, but he pointed out to his naval commander: “An operation, even if it’s a drastic one, offers at least some hope of saving the patient’s life.” Erich Raeder did not baulk at the idea of abandoning Brest – even he conceded that it was not a suitable base for his ships. But he did baulk at the prospect of withdrawing his ships to home waters, for abandoning the Atlantic coast was tantamount to abandoning the war at sea – with the big ships at any rate. But it went beyond simply abandoning the guerre de course for which he had built his fleet over the past 14 years. The loss of the Bismarck – and more recently the sinking of the Prince of Wales and Repulse – confirmed to Adolf Hitler that battleships “have had their day”. Perhaps they would be sent to Norway – but there was every chance that they might also be broken up, their guns mounted ashore and their crews sent to U-boats. Such ‘ifs’ were, of course, dependent on the biggest if of all: if the ships reach Germany safely. Secrecy and surprise were fundamental to the success of Operation Cerberus, as the breakout would be codenamed. The ships would leave Brest at night to avoid being detected by British air and naval forces, and charge up the Channel, passing Dover in daylight. But were the ships up to such a dash? Erich Raeder doubted it. With their ships being laid up so long, crews were rusty. They needed training – and training at sea at that. No, said Hitler – who knew little, if anything, of life at sea. If the ships began training, the British would soon be alerted through their extensive network of spies. That could only lead to more air raids and the three heavy ships would be
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