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Big Guns In The Atlantic Germanys Battleships And Cruisers Raid The Convoys 193941 Angus Konstam

  • SKU: BELL-34143874
Big Guns In The Atlantic Germanys Battleships And Cruisers Raid The Convoys 193941 Angus Konstam
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Big Guns In The Atlantic Germanys Battleships And Cruisers Raid The Convoys 193941 Angus Konstam instant download after payment.

Publisher: Osprey Publishing
File Extension: PDF
File size: 21.71 MB
Author: Angus Konstam
ISBN: 9781472845962, 9781472845979, 9781472845986, 9781472845993, 147284596X, 1472845978, 1472845986, 1472845994
Language: English
Year: 2021
Volume: 55

Product desciption

Big Guns In The Atlantic Germanys Battleships And Cruisers Raid The Convoys 193941 Angus Konstam by Angus Konstam 9781472845962, 9781472845979, 9781472845986, 9781472845993, 147284596X, 1472845978, 1472845986, 1472845994 instant download after payment.

In the early months and years of World War II, it was Germany's
cruisers and battleships that most ravaged the Atlantic Convoys. This is
the history of those raids, and how the success of 1941's Operation Berlin led directly to the Kriegsmarine sending into the Atlantic its greatest battleship - the mighty, ill-fated Bismarck.

At
the outbreak of World War II the German Kriegsmarine still had a
relatively small U-boat arm. To reach Britain's convoy routes in the
North Atlantic, these boats had to pass around the top of the British
Isles - a long and dangerous voyage to their "hunting grounds".
Germany's larger surface warships were much better suited to this kind
of long-range operation. So, during late 1939 the armored cruiser Deutschland, and later the battlecruisers Scharnhorst and Gneisenau
were used as commerce raiders, to strike at Allied convoys in the North
Atlantic. These sorties met with mixed results, but for Germany's naval
high command they showed that this kind of operation had potential.
Then, the fall of France, Denmark and Norway in early 1940 dramatically
altered the strategic situation. The Atlantic was now far easier to
reach, and to escape from.
During 1940, further moderately successful sorties were made by the cruisers Admiral Scheer and Admiral Hipper.
By the end of the year, with British mercantile losses mounting to
surface raiders and U-Boats, plans were developed for a much larger
raid, first using both cruisers, and then the two battlecruisers. The
climax of this was Operation Berlin, the Kriegsmarine's largest and most wide-ranging North Atlantic sortie so far. Scharnhorst and Gneisenau
remained at sea for two months, destroying 22 Allied merchant ships,
and severely disrupting Britain's lifeline convoys. So, when the
operation ended, the German commander, Admiral Lütjens was ordered to
repeat his success - this time with the brand new battleship Bismarck.
The rest, as they say, is history. These earlier…

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