Showing posts with label Admiral Hipper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Admiral Hipper. Show all posts

Friday, March 17, 2017

March 15, 1941: Cruisers Strike!

Saturday 15 March 1941

15 March 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Clydebank Blitz
A dead child in Clydebank. This picture of the aftermath of the Clydebank Blitz was censored during the war. On or about 15 March 1941.

Italian/Greek Campaign: The first phase of the Italian Primavera Offensive ends today, 15 March 1941. At Mussolini's insistence, ground attacks continue, but the main effort now is Italian artillery barrages. The offensive is a failure, but at least it is not a catastrophe like the opening offensive of the war in October, when the Italians not only failed to advance but were forced to retreat ("We are advancing to the rear!"). The Italian lines hold while the Generals bring up reinforcements and plan new attacks. Responding to recent strong Regia Aeronautica activity, the RAF attacks Italian airfields at Berat and Valona.

Mussolini knows by this point that he cannot lose this war because the Wehrmacht is just over the horizon and the weather is improving. However, if he is to regain any semblance of equality with Hitler, Mussolini must pull off some kind of military achievement in the few weeks that remain before the German tide washes over the battlefield. Thus, he has every incentive to throw his men into further pointless battles that wash the mountain crags and gullies with their blood, in the vague hope that suddenly his troops will find some weakness in the Greek lines and turn a disaster into an honorable campaign.

East African Campaign: Lieutenant-General William Platt finally has his forces arranged to attack the Italian strong point of Keren again. At 07:00, the 4th Indian Infantry Division begins attacking from Cameron Ridge, on the left side of Dongolaas Gorge. Their objectives are Sanchil, Brig's Peak, Hog's Back and the three peaks of Mount Sammana - essentially, the heights overlooking the gorge. The main problem for the Indian troops is that there is no cover - they are exposed to Italian fire from above, and often from all sides. Both sides take heavy casualties in this attack. The RAF sends Blenheim and Wellesley bombers over the battlefield, but bombs do little against the rocks and gravel.

On the right side of the Dongolaas Gorge, the 5th Indian Infantry and 2nd Highland Light Infantry also attack. As on the left, the problem for the British is the fact that the Italians have the high ground and can shoot down on soldiers advancing over bare rock. The British forces make little progress on this site, either. However, after dark, the 9th Brigade makes progress and attacks the Pimple and Pinnacle features. After a vicious battle, the Indian troops take the Pinnacle. However, the Italian forces at Fort Dologorodoc remain intact and plan a counterattack in the morning.

While Platt attacks the strong Italian defenses at Keren, he also wants to flank the strong point and cut its lines of communications. The Indian troops of 4/16 Punjab probe the Italian defenses on Engiahat and find them to be very strong. The British bring up artillery for an assault on Engiahat, while a Foreign Legion battalion moves up to occupy Mount Gegghiro and free troops for the assault on Engiahat.

15 March 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Glasgow Herald Clydebank Blitz
The Glasgow Herald reported on the recent heavy Luftwaffe raids on Glasgow and Clydebank, 15 March 1941.
European Air Operations: RAF Bomber Command puts 21 bombers over Dusseldorf. Another 37 aircraft attack the U-boat pens at Lorient.

The Luftwaffe attacks London with 101 bombers, losing two Heinkel He 111s.

Glasgow and Clydebank begin recovering from the Clydebank Blitz of 13-15 March. The authorities later calculate that 528 people have been killed and 617 seriously injured in Clydebank, and 1200 killed and 1100 seriously injured in all of Clydeside. Glasgow is calculated as having about 650 people killed. The massive number of people made homeless in Clydebank are dispersed to surrounding localities.

15 March 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Clydebank Blitz
"Distribution of people made homeless by the raids who were evacuated from Clydebank, 17 March 1941." National Records of Scotland, ED31/528.
Battle of the Atlantic: Operating in the Atlantic shipping lanes near the Cape Verde Islands, German heavy cruisers Gneisenau and Scharnhorst only have a few days left to find targets. Scheduled to head to Brest on the 18th, they have little time to find more victims. Normally, a few days at sea in the vast Atlantic would pass without incident, and the ships would make a quick run to the coast. However, Admiral Lütjens gets lucky. With his two tankers trailing him, Lütjens spots a dispersed convoy and decides to go to work.

The bait is tankers and other merchant shipping without an escort. They have been dispersed from Convoy OB 294. Gneisenau captures three and sinks a fourth, while Scharnhorst sinks some ships, too:
  • 5688-ton Norwegian tanker Bianca (captured, all survive)
  • 8046-ton British tanker San Casmiro (captured, two crew are taken POW on Gneisenau)
  • 6405-ton Norwegian tanker Polykarp (captured)
  • 4388-ton British freighter Royal Crown (sunk, all survive)
  • 4564-ton British freighter Myson (sunk, all survive)
  • 4507-ton British freighter Rio Dorado (sunk, all perish)
  • 7139-ton British tanker British Strength (sunk, two dead, rest POWs)
  • 6554-ton British tanker Athelfoam (two dead, rest POWs)
  • 6197-ton British tanker Simnia (sunk, three dead, rest POWs).
It is a nice, easy bag of shipping. The accounts of what happened on which day, the 15th or the 16th, are often muddled. However, these apparently are the ships sunk on the 15th. After putting prize crews on the three tankers and sending them to Bordeaux, the two cruisers of Operation Berlin continue with their attacks on the 16th. The Royal Navy quickly hears about the incident and begins diverting its own ships to the area.

German cruiser Admiral Hipper, meanwhile, has been at Brest for a month. It requires a major overhaul in Germany. Taking advantage of the attention drawn by Operation Berlin to the south, the Germans send it on its way during the day. It is bound for the Denmark Strait, then Norway. The British are completely aware of its departure.

German battleship Bismarck continues receiving supplies for its highly anticipated Atlantic raiding expedition. Today, it takes on board its two Arado Ar-196 scout planes at Scheerhafen, Kiel.

The German supply network in the Atlantic remains functional and highly useful for operations. Today, U-124 (Kptlt. Georg-Whilhelm Schulz), operating about 1000 km southwest of the Cape Verde Islands, meets German raider and supply ship Kormoran. The ship wants to give U-124 seven torpedoes and other supplies such as food and fuel. This will enable U-124 to remain at sea when otherwise it would have to return to port. These lengthened voyages are a boon to the U-boat fleet, greatly magnifying its effectiveness. This particular exchange, though, is prevented for the time being by rough seas, so the ships head south looking for tranquility.

U-110 (Kptlt. Fritz-Julius Lemp) spots a convoy south of Iceland. It is Convoy HX-112. Lemp alerts U-boat command, BdU, which begins assembling a Wolf Pack.

The Luftwaffe bombs Royal Navy minesweeper HMS Britomart at Rye Harbour. The ship is only damaged and is towed to Portsmouth, but there are two dead, including skipper Lt. Commander J.M.S. Cox, DSC.

The Luftwaffe bombs Royal Navy monitor HMS Marshall Soult in Portsmouth Harbour. The damage, however, is slight and does not require time out of service.

British 500 ton freighter Eminent hits a mine and sinks in St. George's Channel off Ballywater. Everyone survives.

British 249 ton tug Warrior hits a mine and is damaged at the mouth of the River Cart in the Clyde. The captain beaches the tug at Renfrew. It is later taken to Glasgow for repairs. The incident is a little tricky because the Warrior is towing Norwegian tanker Ferncourt at the time, but Ferncourt is not damaged further.

Royal Navy corvette HMS Bryony, submarine Umbra, minesweeper Sidmouth, anti-submarine trawler Quadrille and minesweeping trawler Rysa are launched, while minesweepers Alarm and Algerine are laid down.

Convoy HG 56 departs from Gibraltar.

U-371 (Oberleutnant zur See Heinrich Driver) is commissioned, U-82, U-433 and U-434 are launched, U-168, U-181, and U-210 are laid down.

15 March 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Scharnhorst Gneisenau
German heavy cruisers Scharnhorst and Gneisenau together, summer 1939.
Battle of the Mediterranean: The Vichy French government considers its North African possessions to be solid. In fact, today they announce plans to finish train tracks between Algeria and Dakar.

Convoy GA.5 departs from Piraeus bound for Alexandria. It has five British and three Greek ships.

The Luftwaffe continues raiding Malta. Most of the attacks are by lone bombers and fighter sweeps. In one of these fighter sweeps, the Bf 109s of 7,/JG 26 shoot down a Wellington bomber arriving from England. In addition, a Hurricane that is scrambled is damaged. The victory is by Staffel leader Oblt. Muncheberg.

Battle of the Indian Ocean: Tug Chabool departs Aden bound for Berbera. It is never seen again. No survivors.

Battle of the Pacific: Convoy ZK-1 departs from Brisbane carrying Australian troops to serve at Port Moresby and Rabaul.

Spy Stuff: At 07:00, the Gestapo arrests journalist Richard C. Hottelet on suspicion of spying in Berlin. The Gestapo takes him to Alexanderplatz as a "guest." As a "guest," he is treated with friendliness and courtesy, but still is fingerprinted, photographed and locked up. He is not told why he has been detained. Hottelet, son of German immigrants to Brooklyn, in fact, is not a spy - at least as far as we know.

Operation Savanna begins. An RAF Whitley bomber drops five SOE-trained Free French paratroopers about eight miles east of Vannes, France. Their mission is to ambush and kill personnel of German Pathfinder formation KG 100. This formation is based at Meucon airfield and, as far as the paratroopers know, commutes by bus from Vannes (where they are billeted) to Meucon. The idea is to destroy the bus and everyone in it. However, the mission is another special-forces fiasco, as the paratroopers find that the Luftwaffe men no longer ride a bus to work, but instead drive there individually. They disperse and make for the coast for pickup.


15 March 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Gneisenau Simnia sinking
Gneisenau sinks the Simnia during Operation Berlin, 15 March 1941. This photo is from the personal album of the radioman on the Gneisenau. Uboatphotos.net.
Anglo/French Relations: Prime Minister Winston Churchill writes a memo to the Foreign Office in which he says of Vichy France's No.2 man, "Darlan is a bad man, with a narrow outlook and a shifty eye. A naval crook is usually a bad kind of crook."

Anglo/US Relations: President Roosevelt's latest personal representative to England, Averell Harriman, arrives in London (via Lisbon) and greets Churchill. Harriman knows Churchill since 1927, and they also met at the New York Stock Exchange during the Wall Street Crash of 1929 when Churchill was on a tour of the United States and Canada (Churchill lost a relatively small sum of money in the crash). Harriman tells Churchill that requested war supplies might not necessarily be forthcoming "unless our military chiefs were persuaded that Britain could make better use of the material" than the US military. Thus, "Washington would need a lot more information about Britain's war plans and prospects" because assistance could see a "large increase."

US/Australian Relations: The British and Australian governments agree to a visit to Australia by the cruiser squadron being led by Rear Admiral John H. Newton in USS Chicago. The US cruisers will arrive at Sydney on 20 March 1941.

German Military: As part of the command shuffle before Operation Barbarossa, Field Marshal von Witzleben replace Field Marshal Gerd von Rundstedt as OB West. Von Rundstedt, highly respected by Hitler, is set to command the southern thrust of the German invasion of the Soviet Union.

US Military: Benjamin Kelsey is promoted to major.

German Government: Adolf Hitler has sent Reichsmarschall Hermann Goering to the west for the time being. There is a minor strategic reason for this: Hitler wants the Reichsmarschall's presence there to reinforce among the British the impression that the Wehrmacht still is planning an invasion - when, in fact, Hitler's eyes have drifted in the opposite direction entirely. The Allies will use the same technique in 1944 when they use General George Patton, Jr. as a decoy for the Normandy landings.

Goering has no problem with serving as a decoy. In fact, he revels in it. Going spends his time in Paris, The Hague, and Amsterdam, essentially doing nothing of importance to the war effort. He is not particularly interested in his command, the Luftwaffe, which actually is benefiting from his absence and making some progress in the Blitz with massive raids against smaller cities. Instead, Goering whiles away his days in art galleries, buying marked-down art from Jews nervously looking over their shoulders and hoping that their "assistance" to the Reichsmarschall can get them exit visas to neutral Switzerland.

US Government: President Roosevelt gives a speech to the annual White House Correspondents' Dinner. It is his first speech at the event, which usually is lighthearted and fun. This speech, however, is serious, almost somber. He states:
We know that although Prussian autocracy was bad enough, Hitlerism is far worse. German forces are not seeking mere modifications in colonial maps or in minor European boundaries. They openly seek the destruction of all elective systems of government on every continent-including our own; they seek to establish systems of government based on the regimentation of all human beings by a handful of individual rulers who have seized power by force. 
He promises, among other things, that the British and Chinese will get what they need to fight aggression, that is, "aid until victory" with no compromise. It is quite a bellicose speech for the leader of a nation that is not at war - at least militarily. The speech is recorded for rebroadcast by the BBC and ultimately is translated into over a dozen languages. He promises "total victory."

Belgium: In Liege, local politicians meet to form the Independence Front resistance group.

15 March 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Clydebank Blitz
Bomb damage in Birkenhead, Cheshire, 15 March 1941.
Australia: Australian troops sail from Brisbane toward points north of Queensland. The Australians will garrison Port Moresby, New Guinea, Rabaul, New Britain Island, and Thursday Island off the north coast of Australia.

Wirraway A20-132 of 12 Squadron RAAF crashes and bursts into flames at the Adelaide River Railway Station. There are two deaths. The cause of the crash is unexplained, or, as the Australian review board puts it, "obscure." The remains of the crash are on display at the Adelaide River Railway Station Museum.

Portugal: Lisbon has become the clearinghouse of Europe. As referenced in the classic Humphrey Bogart movie "Casablanca," it is the neutral waystation for travel between Occupied Europe and Great Britain or the Americas. Lisbon is a place packed with agents from both sides, one of the few places that German officials and British agents can watch each other directly. While there are other routes out of Europe, Lisbon is the main embarkation point, both by ship and plane. As such, it is a highly desired destination for people hoping to book travel to far-off climes, either permanently or for business or other personal purposes. This demand is putting a tremendous strain on the city's infrastructure, with refugees having to wait long time periods for tickets out or even to find primitive lodgings while they wait.

Today, American Export Lines, one of the main shipping lines able to pass through the blockade being imposed by both sides, announces that it is fully booked for the foreseeable future. It will no longer take reservations.

China: The Japanese have begun a new offensive toward Shanggao, Jiangxi Province, China. Today, the Japanese 11th Army attacks and takes the headquarters of the Chinese 19th Army, occupying Fengshin and heading toward Tucheng and Kaoan. The Chinese launch a vicious airstrike against the Japanese, destroying their supplies of food and ammunition. This slows the Japanese down and gives the Chinese defenders time to dig trenches, build concrete bunkers and form a solid new defensive line. There now are 65,000 Japanese troops facing 100,000 Chinese.

British Homefront: British actress Doris Hare marries Dr. J. Alexander Fraser Roberts at St. Paul's Church, Convent Gardens.

American Homefront: A blizzard hits North Dakota and Minnesota after a day of mild temperatures. It results in about 68 deaths. The storm comes under the category of "Alberta Clippers," which are fast-moving storms of brief duration.

Glenn Miller and his Orchestra continue their dominance of the brand new Billboard singles chart. "The Song of the Volga Boatmen" hits No. 1 and becomes one of the year's top ten singles.

Future History: Michael Edward Love is born in Baldwin Hills, Los Angeles, California. Mike begins playing the saxophone. He and some neighborhood boys form the Pendletones, playing in their garages. The group switches lead vocals, but Mike Love is the central go-to singer. Love also begins writing songs for the group to sing. The group eventually changes its name to the Beach Boys, and they embark on a string of classic pop tunes. The Beach Boys hit what many consider to be their peak in the mid-sixties with "Pet Sounds" and "Smile," but their career spans many decades and continues to this day. Mike Love continues to make music, much of it unreleased, and he has said (in 2013) "I've stockpiled these things for decades now, but we finally have a team to get my music out." Mike Love published his autobiography, "Good Vibrations: My Life as a Beach Boy," on 13 September 2016.

15 March 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Blizzard North Dakota
A casualty of the 15 March 1941 blizzard. Many deaths were caused by cars becoming immobilized, like this one, and the occupants abandoning them to try to walk to town or home.


March 1941

March 1, 1941: Rettungsboje
March 2, 1941: Oath of Kufra
March 3, 1941: Germans in Bulgaria
March 4, 1941: Lofoten Islands Raid
March 5, 1941: Cooperation With Japan
March 6, 1941: Battle of Atlantic
March 7, 1941: Prien Goes Under
March 8, 1941: Cafe de Paris
March 9, 1941: Italian Spring Offensive
March 10, 1941: Humanitarian Aid
March 11, 1941: Lend Lease Become Law
March 12, 1941: A New Magna Carta
March 13, 1941: Clydeside Wrecked
March 14, 1941: Leeds Blitz
March 15, 1941: Cruisers Strike!
March 16, 1941: Kretschmer Attacks
March 17, 1941: Happy Time Ends
March 18, 1941: Woolton Pie
March 19, 1941: London Hit Hard
March 20, 1941: Romeo and Juliet
March 21, 1941: Plymouth Blitz
March 22, 1941: Grand Coulee Dam
March 23, 1941: Malta Under Siege
March 24, 1941: Afrika Korps Strikes!
March 25, 1941: Yugoslavia Joins The Party
March 26, 1941: Barchini Esplosivi
March 27, 1941: Belgrade Coup
March 28, 1941: Cape Matapan Battle
March 29, 1941: Lindbergh Rants
March 30, 1941: Commissar Order
March 31, 1941: Cookie Bombs

2020

Saturday, February 25, 2017

February 24, 1941: Okuda Spies in Hawaii

24 February 1941

24 February 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Hofbrauhaus Munich 24 February 1941
Hitler at the Hofbrauhaus, Munich, 24 February 1941. Visible aside from Hitler are Martin Bormann, Heinrich Himmler, Rudolf Hess, Robert Ley, Julius Schaub.

Italian/Greek Campaign: The big conference between British and Greek leaders continues in Athens on 24 February 1941. The British promise to send 100,000 men, including three British divisions and an armored brigade.

Meanwhile, one of the most momentous decisions of the Greece campaign is being made a thousand miles away. At 17:00, the War Cabinet meets along with Australian Prime Minister Robert Menzies, in London after his long flight from Melbourne. The minutes show that Eden and Dill (in Athens) and General Wavell (who, as noted, remains in Cairo):
had recommended that we should send armed forces to Greece to help the Greeks meet a German advance through Bulgaria.
Menzies is a little more doubtful. He says at the War Council meeting that he would like to be "reassured" about things such as tactics and the composition of the expedition. He says that he would rather not commit Australian troops to a "forlorn hope," in which case "it had better not be undertaken." Another complicating factor is that "Wild Bill" Donovan has told President Roosevelt about the proposed operation, and canceling it now "would have a bad effect in the United States." Menzies later comments in his diary that he is the only one to ask questions, and the whole thing "would have been finished in ten minutes, but for some queries raised by me regarding air support, problems of equipment, of shipping and of time." History shows that Menzies had quite valid concerns, but the room is full of Churchill supporters, and the outcome of the deliberation is certain.

After everyone speaks, the War Council votes. It unanimously approves "sending military assistance to Greece."

East African Campaign: The British are on the move, both along the Juba River and toward Mogadishu. Middle East Commander General Wavell, who is busy worrying about what troops to transfer to Greece, cables General Cunningham to press on to Harar and cut communications between Addis Ababa and Djibouti. The 12th African Division continues pressing north along the Juba, while the 11th Division continues toward Mogadishu against very light Italian resistance. It reaches Goluin, only about 50 miles from the important port.

West African troops capture Brava, a port 160 miles up the coast from Kismayu. Indian 7th Indian Brigade moves south of Cub Cub and takes Chelamet.

24 February 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Hawker Hind trainer crashed
This Hawker Hind trainer (L7226) of RAF No. 501 Squadron crashes on 24 February 1941 at Balls Farm, Langford (Malcolm Handscombe Collection).
European Air Operations: RAF Bomber Command raids Brest with 60 bombers. While the damage is fairly average for such a raid, it is notable as being the first operation mission by the Avro Manchester 2-engine bomber. Half a dozen Manchester bombers of RAF No. 207 Squadron participate, and one crashes upon returning to RAF Waddington from undercarriage failure. Tactically, the raid is a failure because German heavy cruiser Admiral Hipper, the primary target, is not hit despite claims by the bomber crews that they bracketed it in dry dock. In addition, their Vulture engines display a tendency to overheat. These are Mark I Manchesters with the original triple tail fin, no dorsal turret and an inability to carry the 2000lb bombs that they partially had been designed to deliver. The crash today is an omen, for the Manchester will wind up with the highest combat-loss-to-sorties ratio and the highest accident rate in the RAF.

The Luftwaffe bombs Cambridge after dark. There is little damage and few or no casualties.

Battle of the Atlantic: The destruction of Convoy OB 288 by a large Wolf Pack continues today (see 23 February 1941 for more details). U-95 (Kptlt. Gerd Schreib) joins the action. Sunk today (sources vary, and all are British except as indicated):
  • 8685-ton Dutch transport Grootekerk (U-123) 
  • 1908-ton Norwegian freighter Svein Jarl (U-95 or U-96)
  • 4542-ton Marslew (U-96)
  • 5468-ton Sirikishna (U-96)
  • 3385-ton Linaria (Italian submarine Bianchi)
  • 4260-ton Waynegate (U-73)
  • 3807-ton Cape Nelson (U-95)
  • 4427-ton Temple Moat (U-95)
  • 5360-ton HMS Manistee (U-107 and Bianchi, 140 deaths)
They join some of their fellow convoy members already on the bottom. The ordeal is not yet over for OB 288, though.

Convoy OB 289, which is following OB 288 fairly closely about 500 km northwest of Cape Wrath, Scotland, also comes under attack. U-boat U-97 (Kptlt. Udo Heilmann), on its first patrol out of Kiel, has an awesome start to its career. Heilmann makes repeated attacks and sinks three ships from the convoy and damages a fourth:
  • 6894-ton British freighter British Gunner (sunk)
  • 4973-ton British freighter  Johnathon Holt (sunk, 52 dead)
  • 4894-ton British freighter Mansepool (sunk, two dead)
  • 9718-ton Norwegian tanker G.C. Brøvig (damaged).
The tanker has its bow blown off, but the bulkheads hold and it makes port at Stornoway in the Outer Hebrides. It later is fully repaired. The convoy escorts are noticeably jittery due to all the recent U-boat attacks, and this manifests itself in an order by corvette HMS Petunia for the crew of the British Gunner to abandon ship despite the master's belief that the ship can be towed to port. A total of three ships of 16,761 tons are sunk.

U-48 (Kptlt. Herbert Schultze), one of the war's most successful submarines, adds to its total today. It finds a straggler to Convoy SLS 64 about 60 miles southwest of Fastnet. It is 4289-ton British freighter Nailsea Lass, which U-48 sends to the bottom. There are five deaths and two men become POWs. The other 29 manage to elude German capture and later are picked up by the British. SLS 64, incidentally, was the convoy that Admiral Hipper had attacked on the 12th, sinking seven ships, so this adds to that carnage.

The Luftwaffe strafes minesweeper HMS Blackpool off the northeast coast of Scotland. It suffers minimal damage.

Royal Navy 265-ton minesweeping trawler HMT Erimo hits a mine and is seriously damaged just off Swansea. It makes port.

Royal Navy destroyers HMS Impulsive and Intrepid lay minefield GT in the Channel.

Royal Navy destroyer HMS Inconstant and minesweeper HMS Cromarty are launched.

U-512 is laid down.


24 February 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Life Magazine Anzac Conquerors
"Anzac Conquerors," Life Magazine, 24 February 1941.
Battle of the Mediterranean: Operation Abstention begins. This is a British commando operation to seize the strategically useful island of Kastellorizo from the Italians. By seizing it, the Royal Navy essentially could seal off the southeast Mediterranean from Italian shipping. The British remain preoccupied with the Greek islands throughout the war, perhaps a holdover from Winston Churchill's experiences during World War I and the failed Gallipoli campaign. About 200 commands at Suda Bay, Crete board destroyers HMS Decoy and Hereward, accompanied by 24 Royal Marines on gunboat HMS Ladybird. Another force sails from Cyprus. They plan to land on Kastellorizo at dawn on the 25th and wrest it from the Italians.

Advanced Afrika Korps troops skirmish again with advance British troops west of El Agheila. While there have been several claims of "first" in terms of firing between the Germans and British in Libya, this incident has a better claim than some others: it involves tanks, armored cars, and motorcycles. While the Germans ambush a British/Australian patrol, thereby unequivocally confirming their presence, the British in Cairo take little notice of this; instead, they remain bound and determined to take troops out of North Africa for the campaign in Greece. This, of course, is happening at precisely the wrong moment, with yet another convoy of German troops about to arrive in Tripoli.

Italian troopships Esperia, Conte Rosso, Marco Polo, and Victoria depart Naples. They are under heavy escort and bound for Tripoli. Several Royal Navy submarines are in the area, such as HMS Upright, which already has claimed an independent victim off the coast of Tunisia.

Three German Heinkel He 111 bombers continue the attacks on Tobruk Harbor which have forced most Royal Navy ships to flee eastward (and which sank monitor HMS Terror on the 23rd). Today, these bombers get another victim when they sink the destroyer HMS Dainty. There are 16 deaths and 140 survivors.

The Luftwaffe (II,/KG 26) torpedoes and sinks 3089-ton Free French freighter Louis Charles Schiaffino in the Gulf of Philippeville off East Collo, Algeria (some sources place this on the 25th).

Royal Navy submarine HMS Ursula (Lt. Ward) had attacked and damaged 5788-ton Italian freighter Sabbia on the Naples/Tripoli route on the 21st. Today, Sabbia either makes port in Tripoli or is sunk by Royal Navy submarine HMS Regent, depending on the source.

The Free French siege of El Tag fortress in Kufra continues. The French are raining artillery and mortar shells on the Italians, who have no weapons with which to respond.

Convoys BN 17 and BS 17 depart from Suez.

24 February 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Hawker Hind trainer
Another photo of the Hawker Hind that crashed today, 24 February 1941 (All photos: Malcolm Handscombe Collection).
Spy Stuff: Japanese Vice-Consul (acting Consul General) Ojiro Okuda in Hawaii has been spying for the Japanese on the US fleet docked in Pearl Harbor. Okuda picks out quiet spots overlooking the harbor and uses his binoculars to see what ships are in port. Armed with a copy of "Jane's Fighting Ships," he provides detailed information on ship movements and locations. Today he sends another message to Tokyo, which reads in part:
The Enterprise came into port from the continent on the 21st, having transported 31 Army pursuit planes of the Curtiss-Hawk P36 classification. She immediately returned to the continent; (there is a rumor that she went on to Manila). I have observed the following ships in Pearl Harbor:
6 battleships, two of the New Mexico, two of the Pennsylvania, one of the Oklahoma, and one of the California type.
4 heavy cruisers, two of the New Orleans, and two of the Portland class.
7 light cruisers, three of the Honolulu and four of the Omaha type.
The aircraft carrier Yorktown.
Naturally, if the Americans knew that Okuda was spying, he would be expelled from the country instantly and a major diplomatic row would ensue. However, ignorance is bliss, and the US military is unaware that the most obvious spies of all are openly traveling around the island scouting out US Navy assets.

Anglo/Japanese Relations: The British, who have been monitoring secret Japanese communications via decrypts and thus have a very good idea of Japanese intentions, deliver a diplomatic reply to the Japanese Ambassador about his offer of mediation in the European conflict. It notes in passing that "All the preparations which are being made in oriental regions by Great Britain and the United States are of a purely defensive character." The British government rejects the offer of mediation because:
[I]n a cause of this kind, not in any way concerned with territory, trade or material gains, but affecting the whole future of humanity, there can be no question of compromise or parley.
This reply bears the unmistakable hand of Prime Minister Winston Churchill. Many in Great Britain, including some highly placed personages, feel that negotiations with Germany should at least be tried. However, Churchill is absolutely adamant that no talks of any kind should occur.

24 February 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Brewster Buffalo
A Brewster Model 339 Buffalo Mk I (AS426) at the Aeroplane and Armament Experimental Establishment at Boscombe Down in Wiltshire, 24 February 1941. © IWM (E(MOS) 218). This is from a Belgian contract taken over by the British Government. The RAF finds the American planes inadequate and passes them off to the Fleet Air Arm.
US Military: Lieutenant Colonel Omar Nelson Bradley, an assistant to US Army Chief of Staff George Marshall, is promoted to a wartime temporary rank of brigadier general. This is done to enable him to become the commandant at the US Army Infantry Training School at Fort Benning, Georgia.

British Military: Respective county divisional headquarters form for new units in Lincolnshire, Yorkshire, and Dorchester.

Bulgarian Government: In a speech at the opening of the National Assembly (Naradno Subranie), Tsar (King) Boris III vows not to change the country's official posture of neutrality. The British mission in the country packs its bags and leaves Sofia, a sure sign that an end to diplomatic relations is in the offing.

Vichy France: Admiral Darlan, the new Vice Premier, names his cabinet. General Huntziger becomes Minister of War. Darlan himself takes the key spots of minister for foreign affairs, defense, and the interior. As Marshal Petain's hand-picked successor, Darlan basically will run the government - as long as he does not personally offend Petain like Laval.

24 February 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Hong Kong map
A map to accompany Sir David Owen's report on Hong Kong development, dated 24 February 1941.
Hong Kong: Sir David J. Owen submits a report of this date entitled "Future Control and Development of the Port Of Hong Kong." It is considered a seminal work on the port's evolution. In the short term, Hong Kong's development will be drastically affected by events of which Sir Owen can have no inkling at the time.

Antarctica: US icebreaker Bear meets Interior Department vessel North Star off Adelaide Island. Their mission is to evacuate East Base from Antarctica. They are unable to penetrate the ice and retreat to Dallman Bay. North Star then travels to Punta Arenas, Chile for supplies while Bear searches for a way through the pack ice. It is troubling to those on the ships that they are having difficulty reaching the base despite the fact that it is high summer in the Antarctic.

German Homefront: Adolf Hitler delivers a speech in Munich at the Hofbrauhaus to commemorate the date in 1920 when he joined the NSDAP (he does not mention the Party already was in existence, and he had joined as a member of military intelligence to infiltrate suspected terrorists). He reports that "just two hours ago" he received a report that "a single convoy of 125,000 tons" had been "destroyed yesterday." The convoy in question, OB-288, in fact, has suffered tremendous losses, but nowhere near the amount, he claims. His other numbers of Allied shipping losses also are gross exaggerations. He does make vague references to an increased U-boat offensive in the offing but without any specifics.

Continuing a theme extended by Mussolini in a speech in Rome on the 23rd, Hitler assumes a typical defensive tone at some points.
My opponents may believe that they can terrify me with the threat of time, but I have learned to wait, and I have never been idle while waiting... It is for this reason that such threats do not frighten us.
He also adopts an offended attitude about the Allies' rejections of his previous half-hearted peace overtures:
I have made proposal after proposal to Britain; likewise to France. These proposals were always ridiculed-rejected with scorn. However, when I saw that the other side intended to fight, I naturally did that which as a National Socialist of the early days, I did once before: I forged a powerful weapon of defense.
Thus, despite his repeated decisions to invade other countries, Hitler portrays himself (and presumably Germany, though the speech is all about him and his decisions) as the victim of bullies.

Another oddity in hindsight is when he catalogs a list of reasons offered by his enemies why his rule would collapse quickly. Among them is the following:
Then they said: "Winter, General Winter is coming, and he will force Germany to her knees." But, unfortunately, the German people are "winter-proof." German history has passed through I do not know how many tens of thousands of winters. We will get through this one, too.
This, of course, is not a claim he would be able to make at the next anniversary.

Dutch Homefront: A group of anti-fascist organizations meets in the Noordemarkt. They decide to start a nationwide strike. The Communist Party of the Netherlands, previously outlawed, is an enthusiastic participant/organizer and plans to print up placards and flyers announcing the strike, which is to begin on the 25th.

American Homefront: Another Gallup poll is released, this one regarding attitudes toward Japan. There are two major questions.

Question 1: "Do you think the United States should try to keep Japan from seizing the Dutch East Indies and Singapore?"

Yes: 56%
No; 24%
No Opinion: 20%

Question 2: "Do you think the United States should risk war with Japan, if necessary, in order to keep Japan from taking the Dutch East Indies and Singapore?"

Yes: 39%
No. 46%
No Opinion: 15%.

The results are interesting in that they appear to support President Roosevelt's policy of economic, but not military, warfare against Japan.

24 February 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com HMS Dainty
HMS Dainty, sunk today by Luftwaffe bombers off Tobruk. 
February 1941

February 1, 1941: US Military Reorganization
February 2, 1941: Wehrmacht Supermen
February 3, 1941: World Will Hold Its Breath
February 4, 1941: USO Forms
February 5, 1941: Hitler Thanks Irish Woman
February 6, 1941: Operation Sunflower
February 7, 1941: Fox Killed in the Open
February 8, 1941: Lend Lease Passes House
February 9, 1941: Give Us The Tools
February 10, 1941: Operation Colossus
February 11, 1941: Afrika Korps
February 12, 1941: Rommel in Africa
February 13, 1941: Operation Composition
February 14, 1941: Nomura in Washington
February 15, 1941: Churchill's Warning
February 16, 1941: Operation Adolphus
February 17, 1941: Invade Ireland?
February 18, 1941: Panzerwaffe Upgrade
February 19, 1941: Three Nights Blitz
February 20, 1941: Prien's Farewell
February 21, 1941: Swansea Blitz Ends
February 22, 1941: Amsterdam Pogrom
February 23, 1941: OB-288 Convoy Destruction
February 24, 1941: Okuda Spies
February 25, 1941: Mogadishu Taken
February 26, 1941: OB-290 Convoy Destruction
February 27, 1941: Operation Abstention
February 28, 1941: Ariets Warns Stalin

2020

Wednesday, February 15, 2017

February 15, 1941: Churchill's Warning

Saturday 15 February 1941

15 February 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Camp Barkeley
Camp Barkeley, Texas is activated on 13 February 1941.
Italian/Greek Campaign: The new Greek Epirus Army (I and II Corps) fights hard in the Klisura Pass area on 15 February 1941. However, the front has stabilized everywhere despite both sides desperately trying to push the enemy back.

East African Campaign: The British remain stuck before Keren, Eritrea. However, they continue advancing slowly in other areas in East Africa.

Convoy WS 5B (a Winston Special troop convoy) departs from Durban. It has nine troopships.

European Air Operations: RAF Bomber Command sends 35 bombers against oil installations at Hamburg. For various reasons, only 26 appear over the target. It also sends 43 aircraft to bomb Boulogne. Other bombers mount a propaganda mission to Poland, dropping leaflets over Cracow and Katowice. Coastal Command bombs the docks at Calais, and the RAF mounts Rhubarb raids during the day.

The Luftwaffe attacks the Northumberland mining district. About 130 bombers appear over the coastal area. While it is not a major raid by London standards (which also receives some attention today), it is large by local standards and causes numerous casualties. The Luftwaffe loses a Heinkel He 111P from 6./KG 4 (5J+GP) which crashes at South Shields. There are several deaths, and a land mine that the Heinkel was carrying explodes and causes devastation.

15 February 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com SS Marguerite
The Marguerite, lost today in a collision with the Robert.
Battle of the Atlantic: German battlecruisers Scharnhorst and Gneisenau continue refueling from tankers Esso Hamburg and Schlettstadt. Admiral Lütjens is contemplating his next move south toward the shipping lanes.

German heavy cruiser Admiral Hipper makes port at Brest (some sources say 14 February). It has sunk 8 ships of 34,042 tons. The Royal Navy is aware of its presence and sends out four destroyers from Plymouth to stop it, but they get there too late. The ship also attracts unwanted RAF attention. German authorities immediately begin considering whether to send the ship back to Germany.

German raider Pinguin, operating in the mid-Atlantic north of the island of Tristan da Cunha, meets with tanker Nordmark. Pinguin still has several captured Norwegian whalers that need prize crews. Nordmark itself has the captured "floating delicatessen" refrigerated ship Duquesa, renamed as Herzogin. The ships hook up for several days.

U-123 (Kptlt. Karl-Heinz Moehle), on her third patrol, torpedoes and sinks 6573-ton British freighter Alnmoor about 750 km southwest of Rockall in the North Atlantic shipping lanes. Everyone on board perishes, either 45 or 55 men.

The Luftwaffe bombs and damages 983-ton British freighter Stock Force in the Humber.

A sequence of odd collisions takes place in roughly the same place which results in the loss of three ships. British 286 ton freighter Marguerite, in a convoy, collides with freighter Robert off Flamborough Head, Yorkshire. The Marguerite sinks and there are two deaths, with Robert picking up the survivors. British 958 ton collier Woodstock then is involved in a sequence of incidents in Robin Hood's Bay which results in a lot of damage. It collides with British 1509 ton freighter Paris, causing Paris to sink (it is beached but written off). It then collides with French freighter André Thomé, and the Woodstock sinks quickly from a huge tear below the waterline. It is unclear exactly what went on in this sequence of incidents. Three collisions in such a short period of time and involving the same ships, well, that is unusual.

Portuguese tug Furão sinks at the mouth of the Sado River. Seven crewmen perish.

Royal Navy submarine HMS Cachalot lays 50 mines off Norway in minefield FD 30.

Convoy OG 53 departs from Liverpool.

Royal Navy corvettes HMS Laforey are launched and Fritillary and Genista are laid down.

U-78 (Kapitänleutnant Adolf Dumrese) is commissioned, U-256, U-660, and U-765 are laid down.

15 February 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com American Hospital
"Sister Trotter and Sister Gee help patients with their lunch in a ward at Park Prewitt Hospital in Basingstoke in February 1941." This is the American Hospital. © IWM (D 2072)
Battle of the Mediterranean: In one of those "firsts," there is the first skirmish between British XIII Corps at Sirte, where General Rommel has sent advance troops.

The RAF bombs Lindos Harbor, Rhodes.

US/Anglo Relations: President Roosevelt sends a mission headed by Harvard University President James Bryant Conant to Great Britain to facilitate the sharing of technology. Also included in the mission are  Frederick L. Hovde from Purdue University and Carroll L. Wilson from MIT. This follows on the Tizard Mission from Great Britain that brought the United States cutting edge technology. One of Roosevelt's biggest successes during the war is his focus on advanced technology, though he chooses different areas to concentrate on than the Axis does.

Winston Churchill writes a letter to President Roosevelt about the situation in the Pacific in which he warns about a Japanese attack in the Pacific. He begins by noting that
Many drifting straws seem to indicate Japanese intention to make war on us or do something that would force us to make war on them in the next few weeks or months.
He later states:
But the attack which I fear the most would be by raiders, including possibly battle-cruisers, upon our trade routes and communications across the Pacific and Indian Oceans.
Churchill concludes:
Some believe that Japan in her present mood would not hesitate to court or attempt to wage war both against Great Britain and the United States. Personally I think the odds are definitely against that, but no one can tell.
He asks Roosevelt to impress upon the Japanese that any war against Great Britain would involve the United States as well - something that Roosevelt already has broadly hinted to Japanese Ambassador Nomura.

15 February 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Roland Gravel Canadian soldier
Canadian Lieutenant Roland Gravel of the Les Fusiliers Mont-Royal, Farmborough, England, 15 February 1941.
US/Italian Relations: Responding to Italian demands, presumably based on safety concerns following the Royal Navy attack on Genoa, the US closes its consulates in Naples and Palermo.

US Military: Chief of naval operations Admiral Stark writes a letter to Admiral Kimmel, CINCPAC. Stark states in the letter that torpedo nets are unnecessary at Pearl Harbor because the depth of the harbor is only 75 feet, which Stark believes is insufficient for air-launched torpedoes (90 feet being the assumed minimum). The Japanese are aware of this issue and are working to find a way around this limitation.

Omar Bradley is promoted from lieutenant colonel to brigadier general, bypassing the rank of colonel, and sent to command Fort Benning. Bradley has been Assistant Secretary, General Staff since July 1939.

The US Marine Corps 1st Defense Battalion embarks from San Diego, California on USS Enterprise to take up positions on Johnston Island and Palmyra Atoll. They will first stop at Pearl Harbor.

Naval Air Station (NAS) Kaneohe Bay is established on Oahu. Its commander is Harold M. Martin.

Camp Barkeley, Texas is activated. It is an infantry training post in Taylor County Texas. Construction began on 17 December 1940, and it will be declared surplus on 21 March 1945.

Congress authorizes the construction of a US Marine Corps base at New River, North Carolina.

Japanese Government: There is at least one spy in the Japanese consulate in Honolulu. The Japanese vice-consul in Honolulu, Otohiro Okuda, sends a message to Tokyo warning that the US is planning to declare war on Japan by the end of the first week of March. Where he gets this erroneous information, or rather what the original source was, is unclear.

15 February 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Camp Polk
Rigging on water well number 5 at Camp Polk, Louisiana on 15 February 1941 (National WWII Museum).
Australian Government: Prime Minister Robert Menzies is in Khartoum, and records in his diary that he visits a memorial today to the 21st Lancers during a past border war. Among the names inscribed on it is that of Winston Churchill, who he is on the way to see.

Holocaust: The German government in Austria (Arthur Seyss-Inquart) begins deporting Austrian Jews to Polish ghettos. The first 1000 Jews are sent to a ghetto in Opole, Poland.

Spanish Homefront: There is a large fire in the city of Santander. There are 115 deaths.

Dutch Homefront: Tensions remain high. German sympathizers (the WA and German Grüne Polizei) and opponents continue to engage in scuffles throughout the city. The enclosure of the Jewish Ghetto has been a prime factor in stirring up demonstrations.

15 February 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Michael Maltese
Michael Maltese.
American Homefront: Duke Ellington and his orchestra record "Take the 'A' Train" at RCA Victor's studio in Hollywood Studio. The tune is written by Billy Strayhorn. This is only the first of several commercial recordings, but the most famous and enduring. The song has been under development since 1939 when Ellington wrote down travel instructions for Strayhorn to his house which included the directive "Take the A Train."

Warner Bros. releases "The Haunted Mouse," a Looney Tunes production by Tex Avery (animation by Sid Sutherland). It features the voices of Mel Blanc as the Black Cat (if you have a mouse, you need a cat!) and Walter Tetley as the Haunted Mouse. This is the first writing credit for Michael "Mike" Maltese, who some consider the greatest cartoon writer of all time for his plays on words and original stories. It is Avery's first black and white cartoon in four years as Warners spreads out the work to different directors - Tex leaves the story shortly after.



February 1941

February 1, 1941: US Military Reorganization
February 2, 1941: Wehrmacht Supermen
February 3, 1941: World Will Hold Its Breath
February 4, 1941: USO Forms
February 5, 1941: Hitler Thanks Irish Woman
February 6, 1941: Operation Sunflower
February 7, 1941: Fox Killed in the Open
February 8, 1941: Lend Lease Passes House
February 9, 1941: Give Us The Tools
February 10, 1941: Operation Colossus
February 11, 1941: Afrika Korps
February 12, 1941: Rommel in Africa
February 13, 1941: Operation Composition
February 14, 1941: Nomura in Washington
February 15, 1941: Churchill's Warning
February 16, 1941: Operation Adolphus
February 17, 1941: Invade Ireland?
February 18, 1941: Panzerwaffe Upgrade
February 19, 1941: Three Nights Blitz
February 20, 1941: Prien's Farewell
February 21, 1941: Swansea Blitz Ends
February 22, 1941: Amsterdam Pogrom
February 23, 1941: OB-288 Convoy Destruction
February 24, 1941: Okuda Spies
February 25, 1941: Mogadishu Taken
February 26, 1941: OB-290 Convoy Destruction
February 27, 1941: Operation Abstention
February 28, 1941: Ariets Warns Stalin

2020

Sunday, February 12, 2017

February 12, 1941: Rommel in Africa

Wednesday 12 February 1941

12 February 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Rommel Tripoli North Africa
General Erwin Rommel meets Italian commander General Garibaldi in Tripoli.
Italian/Greek Campaign: Today, 12 February 1941, the Greeks complete the conquest of the Trebeshinë massif. The Italians, however, are building up forces for an offensive in the same sector.

As has been the case for several days, however, the real action is taking place in capitals across Europe and North Africa. In a note to British Middle East Commander General Archibald Wavell, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill sets forth current priorities:
[Y]our major effort must now be to aid Greece and/or Turkey. This rules out any serious effort against Tripoli, although minor demonstrations thitherwards would be a useful feint.... concentrate all available forces in the Delta in preparation for movement to Europe.
This change in priorities from North Africa to Greece is, as Churchill knows, opposed not only by Wavell but by his closest military advisers in London. However, Churchill is acting on his own initiative. He concludes his instructions to Wavell with alternative moves in case the Greeks prove uncooperative regarding British troop inflows (as they have in the past):
[T]hen we must try to save as much from the wreck as possible. We must, at all costs, keep Crete and take any Greek islands which are of use as air bases. We could also reconsider the advance on Tripoli. But these will only be consolation prizes after the classic race has been lost.
Thus, Churchill makes clear that Greece itself is only a pawn in the struggle against Hitler, and only useful in that regard. In essence, he proposes making war on Greece itself if it stands in the way of fighting Hitler on Greek soil.

12 February 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Rommel Tripoli North Africa
General Rommel around the time of his arrival in Libya, 12 February 1941.
East African Campaign: The battle at Keren continues. Today, the 5th Indian Division's 29th Indian Infantry brigade is brought up from Barentu and added to Major-General Beresford-Peirse's 4th Indian Division. The plan is for troops already on the scene to create a gap in the Italian defenses, through which the 29th Infantry can pour through and overwhelm the Italian defenses.

It doesn't go quite like that. At 05:30, the British artillery roars and the 4/6th Rajputana Rifles advance toward the west side of the Dongolaas Gorge. The objective is the Acqua Col, a spot that connects Italian strong-points on either side. Things go wrong right from the start, though: the initial surge carries to the crest of the feature, but there the troops are subjected to murderous crossfire. The battalion leader, Captain Subadar Richpal Ram, is at the forefront, and he has his foot blown off and is shot dead shortly thereafter (Posthumous VC). The 4/11th Sikh Regiment comes at the Col from the side but is stopped cold. The Indian troops are forced to retreat again, leaving them with nothing to show for heavy casualties incurred in several days of desperate fighting.

Lieutenant-General William Platt now has tried to force both sides of the gorge twice, with no success. He decides to build up his supplies and troops and try a set-piece battle at a later date. Platt sends the 29th Infantry Brigade back to Barentu, which is served by a railway line and can be more easily supplied. The British sit down to devise a new strategy.

RAF planes bomb and sink the 590-ton German cargo ship Askari at Kismayo, Somalia, while on a voyage to Mogadishu. The crew of Askari manages to beach it on the 13th, but it is a total loss.

Elsewhere in Eritrea, British forces take Elghena south of Port Sudan.

At Kismayo, Somalia, the Italians scuttle freighters Integritas (5952 tons), Marghera (4531 tons), and Carso (6275 tons). The Carso is later salvaged and renamed Empire Tana.

12 February 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Bristol Blenheim cockpit
Bristol Blenheim Mark V: pilot's controls and instrument panel on the port side of the cockpit. (IWM, February 1941).
European Air Operations: Air activity continues to be light due to the winter weather. The Luftwaffe sends a few planes over England at night, and for most of them, if they drop bombs, nobody notices. The RAF, which has been more active than the Luftwaffe lately, largely stays on the ground both during the day and night.

Battle of the Atlantic: With four German heavy cruisers (Admiral Scheer, Admiral Hipper, Gneisenau and Scharnhorst) on the loose in the Atlantic, the Royal Navy is as stretched as at any point of the war. Force H from Gibraltar departs into the Atlantic to cover Convoy HG 53, which has been under incessant attack by the Luftwaffe and U-boats. Late in the day, it is redirected to cover Convoy WS 6, a troop convoy bound for the Middle East - the other convoy would have to be left to its own devices.

One of those German cruisers, Admiral Hipper, illustrates today why the Royal Navy is worried. After stalking Convoy SLS 64 through the night just east of the Azores, it attacks at dawn. It is a reprise of its Christmas Day attack on another convoy in the same general area, but this time there are no escorts to send it fleeing for the port. In short order, Hipper sinks:
  1. British 4876-ton freighter Warlaby (three survivors)
  2. British 4712-ton freighter Westbury (five deaths)
  3. British 4684-ton freighter Oswestry Grange (five deaths)
  4. British 4542-ton freighter Shrewsbury (20 deaths)
  5. British 4896-ton freighter Derrynane (all lost)
  6. Norwegian 3924-ton freighter Borgestad (all lost)
  7. Greek 5172-ton freighter Perseus (14 deaths)
Hipper also damages 4934-ton British freighter Lornaston. Despite all the losses, it is a fairly quick action, over by 07:40. Hipper probably could have sunk more ships, but it is a rainy and foggy morning, giving the convoy ships cover.

Much confusion develops about this encounter which is not resolved until much later. The British, in possession of the convoy manifest, correctly report 7 ships lost. However, the Germans claim 13 ship victims, and some survivors of the convoy (experienced sea crews) believe that 14 ships were sunk. This is a classic example of how eyewitnesses can perceive vastly different outcomes without any deliberate attempt to inflate the figures - though the Germans are not averse to inflating enemy loss figures.

After this attack, Admiral Hipper heads for Brest. Due to a chain of related reasons, this will be Hipper's last operation for a full year.

Royal Navy submarine HMS Tigris sinks 243-ton French fishing trawler René Camaleyre in the Bay of Biscay.

Swedish 2139 ton four-masted hulked bark Gullmarn, built 1887, drifts ashore at Madeira and is wrecked.

British 8 ton fishing vessel Caledonian hits a mine and blows up.

Royal Navy corvette HMS Amaranthus (Lt. Nicholas B. J. Stapleton, K 17) and destroyer HMAS Nestor (Commander George S. Stewart) are both commissioned.

U-651 (Kapitänleutnant Peter Lohmeyer) is commissioned, U-301 and U-659 are laid down. U-651 develops a reputation for being crewed by particularly fanatical Germans, a spirit apparently imbued by Lohmeyer.

Soviet submarine M-122 is launched.

12 February 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Rommel Tripoli North Africa
General Rommel takes command in Tripoli, on or about 12 February 1941 (Sturm, Federal Archives).
Battle of the Mediterranean: The halt order to General Wavell that arrives today from Churchill and the General Staff forces Wavell to completely re-direct his efforts away from Libya. Brigadier Dorman-Smith, General Wavell's liaison to XIII Corps, finally arrives in Cairo after his 570-mile drive from General O'Connor's advanced headquarters. His instructions are to attempt to secure permission for O'Connor's troops to continue westward. Instead, after being kept waiting all day by Wavell, Dorman-Smith walks in to find that Wavell is no longer interested in Libya at all. Motioning to maps of Greece that have replaced maps of North Africa on his walls, Wavell says, "You find me busy with my spring campaign."

In fact, today does mark a definitive end to Operation Compass. Some Italian troops have been holding out at Beda Fomm despite their hopeless position. Today, the last of them surrender. Throughout the campaign, including the very end today, the Italians have outnumbered the British by roughly 20,000-3000.

General Erwin Rommel flies on a Junkers Ju 52 from Rome to Tripoli to command the new Afrika Korps troops carried in three German transport ships that made port on the 11th. These transports carried elements of the 5th Light Division. The plan is for the Korps to include the light (motorized) division, a panzer division, and Italian infantry (the Ariete and Trento divisions). Rommel meets new Italian Libyan Commander General Italo Gariboldi, who replaced Marshal Rodolfo Graziani.

Rommel has his men march around the town square repeatedly to make it appear that he has more men than he actually does. He also has them drive real and fake German tanks. This is an old German trick, first practiced in the Rhineland in the 1930s when the Luftwaffe would fly the same few planes overhead to make it appear as if it had more forces than it actually did. Naturally, the Germans can assume that there are many British sympathizers among the local populace, word will get out, and appearances are important. The British are 400 miles from Tripoli, but there is virtually nothing standing between them and the few Germans in North Africa aside from Italian troops who have proven themselves completely ineffective.

The second convoy of ships carrying the Afrika Korps departs from Naples. There are four transport ships (Adana, Aegina, Kybfels, and Ruhr) escorted by Italian destroyer Camicia Nera and torpedo boat Procione. The convoy will follow the usual pattern of spending a day in Palermo before proceeding on to Tripoli.

British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden and Chief of the Imperial General Staff General Sir Anthony Dill depart London bound for Cairo. Their mission (according to Churchill's written instructions) is to expedite "speedy succor to Greece" and for CIGS Dill to "advise on the military aspect." He provides a list of 15 points that "require particular attention," the most interesting (in light of later events) of which is "What is the minimum garrison that can hold the western frontier of Libya, and Benghazi."

Churchill's letter of introduction for Middle East commander General Wavell is illuminating as to colloquialisms in use at the time. He writes:
Request you will take all possible precautions for safety of our two Envoys having regard to nasty habits of Wops and Huns.
In another note to Wavell, Churchill offers his "heartfelt congratulations" on taking Benghazi, but forbids any further advances beyond "demonstration attacks." General Rommel later writes:
If Wavell had now continued his advance into Tripolitania, no resistance worthy of the name could have been mounted against him - so well had his superbly planned offensive succeeded.
Of course, the Germans could not know that Wavell was gung-ho for taking Tripolitania, but it was solely the decision of Churchill to stand pat and divert units elsewhere. Some consider this 12 February 1941 order to stop at Benghazi to be one of the greatest British military blunders of the war.

Australian Prime Minister Robert Menzies, on his extended journey from Melbourne to London, returns from Benghazi to Cairo. He experiences "My first Air Raid" before leaving the former, a visit at dawn by some minelaying bombers. The Royal Navy at this time is sending ships from Alexandria and Suda Bay in Operation Shelford to sweep Benghazi Harbor.

At Malta, the increased German presence in the Mediterranean is made plain by the first appearance of Bf 109 fighters over the island. A dozen 7,/JG 26 fighters escort a Fliegerkorps X bombing raid during the afternoon and shoot down three Hurricanes - the worst losses suffered by the RAF on the island to date. The Bf 109 pilots are veterans of the Channel Front and among the best fighter pilots of the time. They are led by ace Oblt. Müncheberg, who gets one of the victories.

Royal Navy submarine HMS Utmost damages 5463-ton Italian freighter Manfredo Campiero off Tripoli.

12 February 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Rommel Tripoli North Africa
Rommel reviewing troops in Tripoli, on or about 12 February 1941.
Battle of the Pacific: Convoy ZT 2 departs from Wellington for Sydney.

Applied Science: Howard Florey's team administers penicillin for the first time to a patient (43-year-old Reserve Constable Albert Alexander) at the Radcliffe Infirmary in Oxford. While a policeman, Alexander incurred his infection to the face while pruning roses in his garden. The experiment is a success, but the patient dies (not enough penicillin available).

Work will proceed on this promising drug for infections. Penicillin, the first true antibiotic, was discovered by Alexander Fleming in 1928 and developed at Oxford by Florey, Ernest Chain, and others. Florey will travel to the United States during the summer to interest the Americans in developing the antibiotic further.

Italian/Spanish Relations: Mimicking the October 1940 meeting at Hendaye between Adolf Hitler and Spanish Generalissimo Francisco Franco, Mussolini meets with Franco at Bordighera on the Italian Riviera to chat "on all problems interesting the two governments at the present historic moment." The meeting is scheduled to take two days. Hitler has high hopes that Mussolini can convince Franco to join the Axis.

Italian/US Relations: Italy requests that the United States close its consulates in Palermo and Naples and consolidate operations in Rome. This purportedly is due to the recent Royal Navy raid on Genoa, which makes the entire Italian seacoast insecure.

12 February 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Viktor Abakumov
Viktor Semyonovich Abakumov (Russian: Виктор Семёнович Абакумов; 24 April 1908 – 18 December 1954). The future first director of the newly created Main Directorate of Counterintelligence (GUKR) SMERSH, "Death to Spies."
Soviet Government: Internal security specialist Viktor Abakumov, head of the UNKVD of Rostov Oblast, arrives at the Moscow headquarter of the NKVD. His new role is as a Senior Major of State Security. He will be working closely with Lavrentiy Beria.

British Government: Prime Minister Winston Churchill takes questions in the House of Commons. He states that
I can recall no occasion when the question of peace aims or reconstruction has been mentioned by any of the representatives of the American Government.
Churchill also memos the Foreign Office conceding that he has received "no reply" to offers made to Vichy French General Weygand. On another topic, he urges the foreign office to be prepared to supply food to Spain in order to induce them to support the Allied cause.

Churchill's Assistant Private Secretary, Jock Colville, notes in his diary today that there was "great opposition" to Churchill's veto of any attempt by XIII Corps to complete the conquest of Libya. He mentions that CIGS Sir John Dill "felt so strongly about it that he was almost thinking of resigning." Colville notes that sending insufficient forces to Greece runs "the risk of another Dunkirk."

Spanish Government: Alfonso XIII, the former king now living in Rome, renounces the throne in favor of his son Juan, who is the third surviving son of the king. Alfonso was deposed by the Second Spanish Republic. Juan, known to history as Infante Juan, Count of Barcelona. Juan is the father of Juan Carlos I, the future king of Spain rather than Juan due to the post-war intervention of Franco.

Chile: The country is 400 years old today, and holds celebrations.

Dutch Homefront: The street battles in Amsterdam continue. The Wehrmacht works with local Dutch police to quarantine the Jewish quarter of the city with barbed Wire. Police checkpoints are set up, and nobody goes in (unless they are Jewish) or out. The occupation authorities meet with Jewish leaders and appoint them as members of the Joodsche Raad (Jewish Council). The Joodsche Raad is a very controversial organization that remains in existence throughout the occupation. Some accuse it of effective collaboration.

12 February 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Penicillin
A comic book showing the first administration of penicillin to treat an infection.

February 1941

February 1, 1941: US Military Reorganization
February 2, 1941: Wehrmacht Supermen
February 3, 1941: World Will Hold Its Breath
February 4, 1941: USO Forms
February 5, 1941: Hitler Thanks Irish Woman
February 6, 1941: Operation Sunflower
February 7, 1941: Fox Killed in the Open
February 8, 1941: Lend Lease Passes House
February 9, 1941: Give Us The Tools
February 10, 1941: Operation Colossus
February 11, 1941: Afrika Korps
February 12, 1941: Rommel in Africa
February 13, 1941: Operation Composition
February 14, 1941: Nomura in Washington
February 15, 1941: Churchill's Warning
February 16, 1941: Operation Adolphus
February 17, 1941: Invade Ireland?
February 18, 1941: Panzerwaffe Upgrade
February 19, 1941: Three Nights Blitz
February 20, 1941: Prien's Farewell
February 21, 1941: Swansea Blitz Ends
February 22, 1941: Amsterdam Pogrom
February 23, 1941: OB-288 Convoy Destruction
February 24, 1941: Okuda Spies
February 25, 1941: Mogadishu Taken
February 26, 1941: OB-290 Convoy Destruction
February 27, 1941: Operation Abstention
February 28, 1941: Ariets Warns Stalin

2020