Kara Sea U-boat campaign
The Kara Sea U-boat campaign was a German submarine operation in the Arctic waters of the Kara Sea during the Second World War. The plan was to repeat Operation Wunderland (16–30 August 1942) in Operation Husar. The Deutschland-class cruiser Lützow was to sortie into the Kara Sea with U-boats in support, to attack Soviet ships. BackgroundUnternehmen Wunderland (Operation Wonderland) was a raid by the Deutschland-class cruiser Admiral Scheer and several U-boats into the Kara Sea in 1942, which was a modest German success. A similar operation, Unternehmen Wunderland II, was planned for 1 August 1943 with the Deutschland-class cruiser Lützow but her participation was cancelled before the operation began.[1] Operation HusarBy July 1943, plans for Operation Husar (Unternehmen Husar) had been laid, a repeat of Operation Wunderland (16–30 August 1942) when Admiral Scheer and several U-Boats had conducted a raid in the Kara Sea. Four U-boats were to be sent into the Kara Sea in support of a raid by Lützow. This was later limited to U-711 and U-354 with U-622 which carried Kenntmann, a party of B-Dienst wireless interception experts, to eavesdrop on Soviet wireless transmissions. The boats were a reconnaissance force for the cruiser and were intended to make Soviet ships sail closer to the coast, where they would be more vulnerable to the guns of Lützow. A Blohm & Voss BV 138 flying boat was included for reconnaissance, after tests of refuelling equipment on U-601 with the BV 138 conducted in Altafjord were a success, U-255 also being equipped with the refuelling gear. The aircraft was to reconnoitre the area as far as the Vilkitsky Strait, between Severnaya Zemlya and Cape Chelyuskin at the boundary of the Kara Sea and the Laptev Sea, checking the extent of sea ice and looking for Soviet ships.[2] With few ships to attack, torpedoes were less effective than mines; the Type VIIC U-boat could lay TMB (torpedo mine type B), three of which could be carried in a torpedo tube and laid on the sea bed. TMB were magnetic mines with 1,280 lb (580 kg) of explosive detonated by the metallic hull of a ship passing overhead; later an acoustic trigger was produced. The larger TMC mines contained 2,200 lb (1,000 kg) of explosive and two could be carried per torpedo tube.[3] In Operation Nelke U-625 mined the west end of the Yugorsky Strait on 20 July with twenty-four TMB mines. Five days later the Soviet minesweeper T-904 was sunk by a mine.[4] On 27 July 1943, en route for the Kara Sea, U-255 sank the Soviet survey ship Akademik Shokalskij (300 GRT). On 1 August the U-boat crew set up a base close to Spory Navolok on the north-east coast of Novaya Zemlya and on 4 August refuelled a BV 138 flying-boat which on 5, 6, 7 and 11 August flew reconnaissance sorties up to the Vilkitsky Strait, ready for operations by Wolfpack Wiking against Soviet shipping by the three U-boats and by Lutzow, which was waiting in Altafjord. With nothing found, another operation supported by U-255 and U-601 was mounted from 4 to 6 September with the same result.[5]
On 28 August, the Soviet submarine S-101 intercepted and sank U-639 (the only German loss of the 1943 campaign).[8]
1944Despite the official end of Wunderland II on 4 October 1943, operations in Kara Sea resumed in 1944 until 4 October.[1]
AftermathThe German operations in the Kara Sea had no effect on Soviet industrial production and the Soviet shipping was only disrupted for a short time. The German operations managed to divert Soviet forces from the operations close Norway.[1] Footnotes
References
Further reading
|