Showing posts with label Brooklyn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brooklyn. Show all posts

Saturday, March 3, 2018

June 6, 1941: Hitler's Commissar Order

Friday 6 June 1941

PM Winston Churchill 6 June 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
"Prime Minister Sees Flying Fortresses, June 6, 1941." Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress (121). LC-USZ62-49896. [Digital ID# cph 3a49988]. That would still be an impressive sight.
Syrian/Lebanon Campaign: The British on 6 June 1941 prepare for an invasion of Syria by stationing the elite Australian 7th Division on the frontier. The Australian Official Historian makes a surprisingly candid observation:
[I]t was the first time in this war, or the one before, that British troops had hidden, like Germans, near a peaceful frontier, ready to make a surprise invasion.
Since one of the post-war claims against former Reich officials after the war is that Germany practiced "aggressive war," this is a surprising admission.

British military intelligence believes, based on statements by Vichy French defectors, that morale in Syria is low and the French will not resist. In fact, the French have positioned the 24th Colonial, 22nd Algerian and 6th French Foreign Legion Regiments along the main coast road, supported by seven battalions of artillery.

British preparations, in general, are minimalist, with commanding General Maitland Wilson in Jerusalem relying on 1:200,000 maps and only 70 RAF planes allotted for Operation Exporter by Cairo (versus 100 Vichy French planes, including the most modern fighters in the French arsenal, the  Dewoitine D.520).

The RAF shoots down a French reconnaissance plane over Palestine. It is a Martin Maryland, or Model 167F in French military terminology.

The British continue taking control of Iraq. They form "X" Flight at Habbaniya, consisting of Gloster Gladiators, to prepare to assist in Syria.

European Air Operations: The Luftwaffe sends a bomber over Durham which drops a single 500 kg bomb near the Liner Railway line at East Jarrow. Another bomber damages some houses at Whitefield Pit, Penshaw, causing three injuries.

PM Winston Churchill De Havilland Queen Bee drone 6 June 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
"The Prime Minister, Mr. Winston Churchill, with Captain The Right Honourable David Margesson, Secretary of State for War, watching preparations being made in an unspecified UK location for the launch of a De Havilland Queen Bee seaplane L5984 from its ramp. The Queen Bee pilotless target drone was a radio-controlled version of the Tiger Moth trainer." © IWM (H 10307).
East African Campaign: Having just captured numerous Italian prisoners, the Nigerian 23rd Infantry Brigade heads south from the Omo River at Abalti in Galla-Sidamo. Italian defenders from Abalti begin withdrawing toward Jimma in Galla-Sidamo.

Battle of the Atlantic: U-106 (Kptlt. Jürgen Oesten), on its extended second patrol out of Lorient, shadows Convoy OB-334 east of the Cape Verde Islands. It torpedoes and sinks 4573-ton British freighter Sacramento Valley. There are three deaths.

U-43 (Kptlt. Wolfgang Lüth), on its 7th patrol out of Lorient, is operating about 1100 km (600 nautical miles, 690 miles) east of Newfoundland when it spots an independent freighter. It pumps two torpedoes into 4802-ton Dutch freighter Yselhaven. The torpedoes break the freighter's back, and it sinks within two minutes. There are 24 deaths and 10 survivors - who are in their lifeboats until 15 June, when Finnish freighter Hammarland picks them up.

U-48 (Kptlt. Herbert Schultze), on its 12th patrol, is operating with Wolfpack West south of Greenland. It torpedoes and sinks 5201-ton British freighter Tregarthen. Everybody on board perishes.

U-46 (Kptlt. Engelbert Endrass), on its 12th patrol out of St. Nazaire, claims that it torpedoes and damages a tanker south of Greenland. According to Endrass, the tanker then rams U-46 while running in circles. There is no record of a tanker encountering a German U-boat at that time and place. In any event, U-46 continues with its patrol.

Finnish 5332-ton freighter Kastelholm, sailing southeast of Iceland. The cause of the sinking is unclear - some sources say it hit a mine (which is unlikely in the mid-Atlantic), others say that it is torpedoed by U-559 (Kptlt. Hans Heidtmann). U-559 is on its first patrol, having sailed from Kiel, and probably has not had sufficient time to reach this spot since sailing on 4 June. Whatever the cause, the Kastelholm sinks, and there is one death and 37 survivors.

North American Aviation Strike in Los Angeles 6 June 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
North American Aviation Strike in Los Angeles, 6 June 1941. They seek a minimum wage of $10.98 an hour and a night differential of $1.46 an hour. After adding in other terms of the proposal, the workers on the night shift with one year of experience would earn $16.82 per hour, or about $35,000 per year (Los Angeles Times).
Italian submarine Marconi is operating off Casablanca when it attacks Convoy HG 64. The Marconi torpedoes and sinks 3395-ton British freighter Baron Lovat. Everybody survives.

Marconi also torpedoes and sinks 1392-ton Swedish freighter Taberg in Convoy HG 64. There are 15 deaths.

Italian submarine Venero, operating with submarine Marconi, also attacks Convoy HG 64 off Casablanca. It fires torpedoes but completely misses.

Italian submarines Emo and Velella also participate in the attack on Convoy HG 64, but their claims of successes are not supported by the Allied records.

The Luftwaffe bombs and sinks 2011-ton British freighter Glen Head west of Gibraltar. There are 27 deaths.

The Luftwaffe bombs and sinks 4767-ton Norwegian freighter Taurus a few miles off Johnshaven, Scotland in the North Sea. Everybody on board survives.

The Luftwaffe bombs and damages 168-ton British trawler Emulator about 8 miles east of Scarborough.

A Fairey Swordfish (RAF No. 824 Squadron) from the aircraft carrier HMS Eagle, operating in the South Atlantic, finds and sinks 9179-ton German blockade runner Elbe. There are 19 survivors, picked up on the 7th by ocean boarding vessel Hilary.

Convoy HX 131 departs from Halifax.

Canadian corvette HMCS Bittersweet is commissioned on the River Tyne, minesweeper Ingonish is laid down in North Vancouver.

USS Terror is launched. It is the first US naval vessel designed as a minelayer.

Brooklyn Bridge 6 June 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The East River is pictured below Brooklyn Bridge, linking Brooklyn and Manhattan, on June 6, 1941 (Charles W. Cushman, color original)
Battle of the Mediterranean: Royal Navy submarine HMS Torbay uses its deck gun to shell 3357-ton French tanker Alberta about eight miles off Cape Helles, Turkey in the northeastern Mediterranean.  The British then board the damaged tanker, which the British suspect of supplying French forces in Syria from Turkey. The British sabotage the tanker, which is disabled, then submerge to see what happens to it. As the day ends, the tanker is in no danger of sinking, and the Turks have sent a tug out to tow it to port.

Operation Battleaxe, the planned British offensive on the Libyan frontier, is pushed back from 7 June to 15 June. The reason is the failure of British tanks to reach the units of General O'Moore Creagh.

Operation Rocket, the latest supply mission from Gibraltar to Malta, reaches its climax as Royal Navy aircraft carriers HMS Ark Royal and Furious send 44 Hawker Hurricanes to the island. Of the 44 planes, 43 make it successfully and one turns back with mechanical problems. There are 25 of the faster Mark II model of the Hurricane. The RAF divides the planes among Malta's three airfields.

The Luftwaffe attacks Malta three times during the day. The targets are Kala Bay, Ta Qali airfield, and Luqa airfield. No planes are lost by either side, and not much damage is caused.

Battery Park toward the Statue of Liberty 6 June 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The view from Battery Park toward the Statue of Liberty, 6 June 1941 (Charles Weever Cushman). This picture is an original color photo taken on Kodachrome.
German/Finnish Relations: Talks occur in Kiel between military representatives regarding naval coordination in the event of hostilities with the Soviet Union. The Germans begin sending troops to Finland by air and sea to prepare for Operation Barbarossa. However, the Finns remain unaware, at least officially, of German plans to invade the Soviet Union within weeks. The top-level talks between the two sides in Salzburg conclude today.

The Waffen-SS has been recruiting in Finland. Today, the first 120 Finnish volunteers head to Germany for training. They are to form the Finnish Volunteer Battalion of the Waffen-SS (German: Finnisches Freiwilligen-Bataillon der Waffen-SS) of the SS-Regiment Nordland of the SS Division Wiking. The men have signed up for a two-year commitment.

Commissar Order 6 June 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The cover page of the 6 June 1941 Commissar Order.
German Military: The OKW issues another in its stream of highly illegal orders in preparation for Operation Barbarossa, still planned to begin on 22 June. This one is called the Commissar Order (German: Kommissarbefehl). The order singles out political commissars as "The originators of barbaric, Asiatic methods of warfare." The commissars are:
to be separated from the prisoners of war immediately, i.e., already on the battlefield.... These commissars are not to be recognized as soldiers; the protections due to prisoners of war under international law does not apply to them. Whey they have been separated, they are to be liquidated.
The order leaves it to the local commander's discretion as to whether the commissar is "guilty" and thus should be "finished off" based on the commander's "personal attitude and bearing of the commissar."

Commissars are attached to all military units in the Red Army. They have dual command authority over the troops, which includes military operations. They primarily are responsible for the political indoctrination of the troops.

This is a blatantly illegal order that flouts all principles of international law. The Reich is bound by the terms of the Geneva Convention of 1929 regardless of the fact that the Soviet Union did not sign it, as the Geneva Convention specifically provides:
In case, in time of war, one of the belligerents is not a party to the Convention, its provisions shall nevertheless remain in force as between the belligerents who are parties thereto.
Hitler argues that the Soviet Union is not protected by any terms of the Geneva Convention because it did not sign the Convention. There is little doubt, however, that the OKW does consider the Commissar Order, regardless of its perceived appropriateness, illegal.

Only the most senior commanders receive the order, and they are instructed to tell their troops of its contents verbally. Some do, and some don't.

During the day, Admiral Raeder meets with Hitler to discuss the war in the Mediterranean, which Raeder strongly believes is the key to defeating the British. Hitler, however, is not interested, his focus now is on the East.

British Military: The Air Ministry orders 454 Avro Lancaster Mk I heavy bombers. They are to be powered by Merlin engines.  The Air Ministry also orders two Lancaster Mk II bombers, to be fitted with Bristol Hercules VI engines.


USS Enterprise (CV-6) 6 June 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
 (USS Enterprise CV-6) underway in the Pacific, June 1941 (US Navy).
US Military: The US Navy opens Naval Air Station (NAS) Balboa in the Panama Canal Zone.

US Government: President Roosevelt claims during a press conference that German propaganda is misleading many Americans into thinking that Great Britain is on the verge of surrender.

President Roosevelt signs a bill (Act of June 6, 1941, 55 Stat 242, "The U.S. Ship Requisition Act") allowing the US Navy to requisition all idle foreign merchant ships in US ports. He also signs an executive order (9848) authorizing the Maritime Commission to operate or dispose of the ships in the interest of national defense. These new laws affect 84 foreign vessels in US ports.

China: The Chinese 5th Pursuit Group receives six Soviet I-153s to use as night fighters. The need for such fighters became very clear on the 5th, when a Japanese raid in the evening hours, caused thousands of deaths in the Nationalist capital of Chungking.

New York Times 6 June 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
New York Times, 6 June 1941.
American Homefront: Former Presidential Candidate Wendell L. Willkie makes a radio broadcast entitled "Let Us Not Be Divided." He notes:
I cannot tell you the point at which we may become involved in war. Neither can any other American. All we can know is that if and when Hitler thinks it is to his advantage, he will make war upon us.
Willkie notes, however, that the is "not divided but the United States of America."

Louis Chevrolet, the co-founder of the Chevrolet automobile company, passes away at age 62.

Strikes continue at North American Aviation and Walt Disney Studios.

Market Street Railway's Castro Street Cable line 6 June 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Removal of the turntable at 26th and Castro, San Francisco, on 6 June 1941. The discontinuation of the Market Street Railway's Castro Street Cable line is a sign of the times - it is being replaced by the 24 Bus Line (John Henry Mentz, Market Street Railway). 

June 1941

June 1, 1941: Farhud Pogrom
June 2, 1941: Massacres on Crete
June 3, 1941: Kandanos Massacre
June 4, 1941: Kaiser Wilhelm Passes Away
June 5, 1941: Death in Chungking
June 6, 1941: Hitler's Commissar Order
June 7, 1941: Commandos Strike at Pessac
June 8, 1941: British Invade Syria and Lebanon
June 9, 1941: Litani River Battle
June 10, 1941: British Take Assab
June 11, 1941: Hitler Thinking Beyond Russia
June 12, 1941: St. James Agreement
June 13, 1941: Lützow Damaged
June 14, 1941: Latvian June Deportations
June 15, 1941: Operation Battleaxe
June 16, 1941: The Old Lion
June 17, 1941: British Spanked in North Africa
June 18, 1941: Turkey Turns Its Back
June 19, 1941: Cheerios Introduced
June 20, 1941: Birth of US Army Air Force
June 21, 1941: Damascus Falls
June 22, 1941: Germany Invades Russia
June 23, 1941: A Soviet KV Tank Causes Havoc
June 24, 1941: Kaunas and Vilnius Fall
June 25, 1941: Finland Declares War
June 26, 1941: Bombing of Kassa
June 27, 1941: Encirclement At Minsk
June 28, 1941: Minsk Falls
June 29, 1941: Brest Fortress Falls
June 30, 1941: Mölders Becomes Top Ace

2020

Wednesday, February 1, 2017

February 1, 1941: US Military Reorganization

Saturday 1 February 1941

1 February 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Derna British troops
"Infantry advancing outside the fort at Derna, 1 February 1941." © IWM (E 1837).
Italian/Greek Campaign: The Battle of Trebeshina ramps up on 1 February 1941. The Cretan 5th Division, operating as part of II Corps, seizes Trebeshina from the defending Italian Blackshirts, while the 15th Division captures the village of Bubeshi. The Greeks are engaged in a very costly attempt to take the Trebeshinë massif which will take time, effort and a lot of lives. The Italians are fighting more effectively than they have at any time during the campaign. The weather is horrendous, especially at the higher altitudes, crimping operations.

East African Campaign: With the mass of defeated Italian troops fleeing from the Mount Cochen defensive line just breached by General Sir William Platt's Indian 4th and 5th Infantry Divisions, the British 4th Indian Division take Agordat and 5th Indian takes Metemma in Eritrea. This is a key road junction which joins the roads through the two different passes through the mountains used by the two British divisions independently. The Italians left a small garrison in Agordat of about 1000 men. They are captured with 14 damaged tanks, 43 guns and all of the supplies of the base.

The Italians of the 4th Colonial Division are running for Keren, but the plains beyond the mountains are much more difficult to defend against superior forces. The Italians at Barentu use a road that turns into a mule track which forces them to abandon all their vehicles. After this point, they basically retreat cross-country toward Keren.

In Abyssinia (Ethiopia), South African troops take Gorai and El Gumu.

2nd Lieutenant Premindra Singh Bhagat of the Royal Bombay Sappers and Miners wins the first Victoria Cross for clearing mines.

European Air Operations: RAF Bomber Command raids Boulogne with 13 bombers after dark, while Coastal Command raids Brest - perhaps looking for the Admiral Hipper, which left during the day. There is little Luftwaffe activity during the day.

Oberstleutnant Benno Kosch takes over KG 55.
1 February 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Trafalgar Square London
Buses, taxis, and motorcycles drive past the National Gallery at the top end of Trafalgar Square, whilst pedestrians also go about their daily business, February 1941 (© IWM (D 2100)).
Battle of the Atlantic: German heavy cruiser Admiral Hipper departs from Brest on another raiding mission. This is Hipper's second raiding mission, the first having ended in late December after mediocre results. This makes four German heavy warships in the Atlantic at once - Admiral Hipper, Admiral Scheer, Gneisenau, and Scharnhorst - for the first time in the war. However, they are widely dispersed (except for the latter two ships acting in concert) and thus the effects of having all this firepower on the loose at once are somewhat diluted. German battleships Bismarck and Tirpitz are approaching readiness for missions as well, and if they break out to join the four cruisers, the Kriegsmarine would have the possibility of seriously disrupting the Allies' convoy operations and also of defending themselves against the Royal Navy.

German raiders Scharnhorst and Gneisenau remain in the far north on Operation Berlin. They have rendezvoused with tanker Adria, but rough weather continues to prevent them from topping off yet. After they complete their fuel replenishment, the two heavy cruisers will head for the Denmark Strait to break out into the Atlantic.

U-48 (Kptlt. Herbert Schultze), on its tenth patrol, torpedoes, and sinks 4351-ton Greek freighter Nicolas Angelos in the Atlantic south of Iceland.

British 1251-ton collier Kai (formerly Torholm, Roskva, and Lom) sinks in the Bristol Channel near Trevose Head, Cornwall. This has been an area with numerous recent sinkings from mines.

British freighter Rockpool, from Convoy SC 19, runs aground in heavy fog at Little Cumbrae Island in the Firth of Clyde. The weather is fierce and causes great damage to her stern gear and bottom. She is later salvaged by the Ministry of War Transport and renamed Empire Trent.

German 2530-ton freighter Königsberg-Preussen hits a mine early in the morning and sinks off Cuxhaven.

Convoy OB 281 departs from Liverpool, Convoy BN 14 departs from Aden.

Royal Navy minesweeping trawler HMT Hoy and monitor HMS Roberts are launched.

USS Trigger is laid down.

U-68 (K.Kapt. Karl-Freidrich Merten) is commissioned at Bremen, U-127 is launched and U-764 is laid down.
1 February 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Derna British artillery
A 40mm Bofors Gun outside Derna, 1 February 1941.
Battle of the Mediterranean: Italian troops are retreating from Benghazi to Barce, and their movements are spotted by RAF aerial reconnaissance. Middle East Commander General Archibald Wavell returns to Cairo from Nairobi in the evening and approves General O'Connor's plan to send his XIII Corps armored units south of Green Mountain to try to intercept the rapidly retreating Italians. O'Connor quickly assembles a force under Lieutenant Colonel J.F.B. Combe (the "Combe Force") to strike out for Msus and Antelat within a couple of days.

British Prime Minister Winston continues to obsess about the proportion of British troops in support services in the Middle East. He sends a memo to Secretary of State for War David Margesson complaining in which he purports to be "astonished' that Margesson has not replied to a previous lengthy memo "paragraph by paragraph and point by point." He reiterates:
[E]very effort should be made to secure the highest economy, and deductions drawn from the peculiar condition of the fighting, and the rapid advance made in Libya, do not necessarily apply to a campaign in Thrace or behind the Bosphorus.
He sends another memo to Minister of Economic Warfare Hugh Dalton expressing a desire to strangle Germany's copper supplies. Churchill sees a problem in South American copper exports going to Japan and the Soviet Union, from where they can make their way to Germany. He suggests purchasing the South American copper rather than leaving it for others.

Force H out of Gibraltar is steaming for the vicinity of Genoa to shell Italian shore installations (Operations Picket and Result). The Mediterranean sorties from Alexandria to divert attention from this risky mission. The Mediterranean Fleet in Operation MC 4 sweeps the area around Rhodes during the day.

Wellington bombers based on Malta attack Tripoli. On the island, the government closes the Three Cities during the night as a security measure, as it is largely abandoned due to bomb damage during the Illustrious Blitz. This is a protective measure for the nearby dockyards, the fear being that saboteurs could use the Three Cities ruins as a staging area for diversions from an invasion.

Fighter strength in Malta has increased from the worst days of 1940. The island has been reinforced with the air squadron from the battered HMS Illustrious and currently includes:
  • 28 Hurricanes of No. 261 Squadron
  • 3 Fairey Fulmars and 4 Gloster Gladiators of No. 806 Squadron.
Ten of the planes are out of service, though, and the Illustrious is no longer available to provide aerial support.

The garrison strength on Malta is 802 officers and 14,767 other ranks.

Battle of the Indian Ocean: Responding to a warning call from British freighter Troilus, Royal Navy authorities send aircraft carrier HMS Formidable and heavy cruiser HMS Hawkins to investigate the tanker lanes of the Persian Gulf. The Troilus had spotted German raider Atlantis, disguised as Norwegian freighter Tamesis. However, the Atlantis did not attack the Troilus, and the heavy British warships, operating as Force K, return to base.

Battle of the Pacific: The German naval attaché to Japan, Vice-Admiral Wenneker, has purchased a Nakajima E8N floatplane for German raider Orion, which receives it from supply ship Münsterland today at the Maug Islands in the Northern Marianas. This is the only instance where German forces operate with a Japanese plane.

Spy Stuff: Vera Atkins joins the French section of the Special Operations Executive as a secretary. Previously, she has been an Air Raid Precautions warden in Chelsea.

British Military: The RAF establishes the Air Training Corps to train interested cadets age 16 or over how to fly.

Soviet Military: Fresh off a highly successful performance in war games, Georgy Zhukov becomes the Red Army's Chief of the General Staff. Zhukov also is the Deputy Minister of Defense. General Kirponos replaces him as head of the Kieve Special Military District. Zhukov replaces Meretskov, who temporarily is on the outs with Stalin. General Chuikov becomes a chief military adviser to the Chinese High Command.

1 February 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com General Clayton B. Vogel 2nd Marine Division
Major General Clayton B. Vogel at the activation of the 2nd Marine Division, 1 February 1941.
US Military: The US Navy reorganizes its commands with General Order 143. There now are three fleets: Atlantic, Pacific, and Asiatic. This had been the case in the past.

Admiral (temporary) Husband E. Kimmel takes up his new post as Commander in Chief US Fleet (CINCUS). He also is Commander in Chief Pacific Fleet (CINCPAC) and only becomes CINCUS when his command combines with one or both of the other two fleets (a very unlikely possibility in the case of the Atlantic Fleet). If this seems confusing, well, it kind of is, but it is the result of having a two-ocean navy. Kimmel's flagship is the battleship HMS Pennsylvania anchored at Ford Island in Pearl Harbor. He replaces Admiral James O. Richardson, who has made a lot of enemies stateside due to his criticism of various decisions, such as moving the Pacific Fleet from San Diego to Hawaii and the lack of any regular aerial patrols from Pearl Harbor.

Promoted to Admiral, Ernest J. King now is the Commander-in-Chief, Atlantic Fleet. He is good friends with Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Harold "Betty" Stark, and this relationship will come in quite handy in the future.

Rear Admiral H. Fairfax Leary takes over as Commander Cruisers Battle Force, and Vice Admiral Wilson Brown Jr. becomes the new Commander Scouting Forces, while Rear Admiral John H. Newton becomes Commander Cruisers Scouting Force.

The 1st Marine Division, based aboard the battleship USS Texas, is activated under the command of General Holland Smith. It is created from the 1st Marine Brigade. The division's units, however, are scattered about the Pacific. The 2nd Marine Division, under the command of General Clayton Vogel, also forms from the 2nd Marine Brigade.

The War Department upgrades the US Patrol Force in the Caribbean to fleet status.

Construction begins of Fort Greely on Kodiak Island. This is a coastal fort (not to be confused with the later missile base in the interior of Alaska). It is located near the US Navy base at Chiniak Bay. The fort will include barracks, administration buildings, and hospital facilities. This is a very difficult construction project because of inclement weather and the fact that virtually everything has to be shipped from Seattle.

Chief of Naval Operations Harold Rainsford Stark sends Admiral Kimmel a warning dated today that was contained in a 27 January 1941 communication from the US ambassador in Tokyo to the State Department:
The Peruvian Minister has informed a member of my staff that he has heard from many sources, including a Japanese source, that in the event of trouble breaking out between the United States and Japan, the Japanese intend to make a surprise attack against Pearl Harbor with all of their strength and employing all of their equipment. The Peruvian Minister considered the rumors fantastic. Nevertheless he considered them of sufficient importance to convey this information to member of my staff.
By coincidence, Admiral Yamamoto is meeting on this very topic with his own staff today on this topic.

1 February 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Admiral Stark Admiral Kimmel memo
Warning sent from the Chief of Naval Operations in Washington, D.C. to CINCPAC (Admiral Kimmel) in Honolulu delivering warnings from the Peruvian ambassador about a contemplated Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
Japanese Military: Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto discusses Operation Z, the planned attack on Pearl Harbor, with his Chief of Staff. Currently, the plan goes under the name "Operation Hawaii."

Vichy France: Marcel Déat creates the Rassemblement national Populaire, RNP ("National Popular Rally"). This is a Fascist organization that joins other parties of a similar bent, including Jacques Doriot's French Popular Party (PPF), the far-right Social Revolutionary Movement (MSR) of Eugène Deloncle,  and Marcel Bucard's Francisme. The Germans are big supporters of the RNP.

The RNP and MSR quickly join forces, but there are tensions within all these parties because some, like the RNP, actually take the supposed socialist bent of Fascism seriously. The RNP is actually a socialist party with a Fascist orientation, whereas many of the other Fascist-leaning French parties are, for lack of a better word, Monarchist. Thus, there is no monolithic movement going on with France, but rather various splinter movements that only overlap in certain areas. This is what creates the fertile ground for the seeding of additional parties like the RNP, which is based near the Gare Saint-Lazare.

1 February 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Oxford Street London
Oxford and Gilbert Street, London, February 1941.
Panama: The US plans to add a third set of locks to the Panama Canal, which is taking on huge strategic importance due to rising war fears.

South Africa: Members of the Ossebrandwag ("Ox-wagon Guard") (OB) riot in Johannesburg, with 140 soldiers seriously hurt. The OB is a Boer militant group that, according to later documents, is:
based on the Führer-principle, fighting against the Empire, the capitalists, the communists, the Jews, the party and the system of parliamentarism... on the base of national-socialism.
The OB is openly against the British war effort, but this is the first time that they actually start a riot. The Union government begins cracking down on the OB after this, setting up internment camps.

Australia: Prime Minister Robert Menzies continues his long journey from Melbourne to London. Today, he reaches Iraq, which is going through governmental turmoil and where a local official suggests that the locals may need a "show the flag" type of visit by Australian forces on their way to Egypt.

Philippines: Due to rising war fears, Henry L. Stimson's US War Department issues a bulletin for dependents to return to the United States. The extent of the US military presence on the archipelago is under serious debate, with local commanders such as General MacArthur wishing a larger commitment, but the bureaucrats in D.C. preferring a smaller commitment there and at Guam due to the difficulty of defending isolated positions far across the Pacific.

Japan: Rice rationing is instituted. This likely is related to the loss of fertilizer supplies due to the German attack on the phosphate facilities at Nauru in December 1940.

Antarctica: Having evacuated West Base, the Interior Department now sends auxiliary USS Bear to Adelaide Island to evacuate Antarctica Service's East Base later in the month. It is, of course, high summer in the Antarctic.

American Homefront: Glenn Miller signs a new contract with RCA Victor Records. Miller is at the height of his fame and creativity, and he and his band are scheduled to star in two Twentieth Century Fox films in the next year or two, "Sun Valley Serenade" and "Orchestra Wives." With his new three-year RCA contract, Miller makes about $15,000-20,000 per week.

1 February 1941 worldwartwo.filminspector.com Brooklyn Library
February 1, 1941. Children's Rooms at the Brooklyn Public Library, Prospect Park Plaza. Taken by Sam Gottscho from the balcony.

January 1941

January 1, 1941: Muselier Arrested
January 2, 1941: Camp Categories
January 3, 1941: Liberty Ships
January 4, 1941: Aussies Take Bardia
January 5, 1941: Amy Johnson Perishes
January 6, 1941: Four Freedoms
January 7, 1941: Pearl Harbor Plans
January 8, 1941: Billions For Defense
January 9, 1941: Lancasters
January 10, 1941: Malta Convoy Devastation
January 11, 1941: Murzuk Raid
January 12, 1941: Operation Rhubarb
January 13, 1941: Plymouth Blitzed
January 14, 1941: V for Victory
January 15, 1941: Haile Selassie Returns
January 16, 1941: Illustrious Blitz
January 17, 1941: Koh Chang Battle
January 18, 1941: Luftwaffe Pounds Malta
January 19, 1941: East African Campaign Begins
January 20, 1941: Roosevelt 3rd Term
January 21, 1941: Attack on Tobruk
January 22, 1941: Tobruk Falls
January 23, 1941: Pogrom in Bucharest
January 24, 1941: Tank Battle in Libya
January 25, 1941: Panjiayu Tragedy
January 26, 1941: Churchill Working Hard
January 27, 1941: Grew's Warning
January 28, 1941: Ho Chi Minh Returns
January 29, 1941: US Military Parley With Great Britain
January 30, 1941: Derna Taken
January 31, 1941: LRDG Battered

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