| Victory in the Atlantic | ||||
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Winter 1942-1943: in the North Atlantic, winter storms raged with gigantic waves and gusts of winds. But there were worst threats: the number of German submarines, the dreaded U-boats, was growing. Hunting in packs of up to 20 submarines, they targeted Allied convoys. These attacks were so destructive that they threatened to bring transatlantic shipping to a halt, making impossible the invasion of Europe. During the first twenty days of March 1943, 85 Allied ships were torpedoed and sunk. These were the darkest hours of the Battle of the Atlantic. Dark hours for Royal Canadian Navy escort groups as well, as they were
severely criticized by Western Approaches Command. In March 1943, three
of the four Canadian escort groups were pulled away from the Mid-Ocean
Escort Force for additional training at the Royal Navy base in Londonderry.
They were then assigned to the Great Britain-Gibraltar route used by convoys
involved in Operation Torch, the invasion of North Africa. And then, the wind shifted direction
A Change in the Balance of Power
If the U-boat fleet was growing, the number of Allied convoys, freighters,
tankers and escort ships increased as well, in part through the efforts
of the Canadian shipping industry. Improved ASDIC,
radar and radio direction finding systems were installed on
Allied vessels allowing them to better locate and hunt down German submarines.
A new weapon, the "Hedgehog" was coupled to the ASDIC and could
fire up to 24 mortar shells of 30 kg in front of a frigate or corvette.
British intelligence services broke the new Enigma cipher allowing the
Allies to intercept U-boat radio messages. Air patrols became more frequent
and longer-ranged, flying from air bases in Iceland, Newfoundland or Great
Britain. The creation of support groups separate from escort groups made it possible to hunt down U-boats with some efficiency and without leaving convoys unprotected from attacks by other submarines of the pack. In April 1943, the command of escort forces in the Atlantic was once more restructured: Western Approaches Command remained responsible for North Atlantic convoy operations east of Newfoundland; the US Navy was responsible for operations in the South Atlantic, including the Great Britain-Mediterranean route. The Royal Canadian Navy was put in charge of operations in the North West Atlantic. Rear Admiral L.W. Murray was appointed as commander in chief for that new theatre. The following month, the three "C" (i.e. Canadian) escort groups
completed their training and returned to the North West Atlantic sector.
All ships were upgraded to improve their combat worthiness. Other Royal
Canadian Navy ships were to be upgraded as well as the war went on, but
the gap between Canadian and Royal Navy ships was never filled. In June
1943, the first Canadian-built frigates
were commissioned. In May, all those measures began to have a definite impact. In three
weeks and a half, 30 U-boats were destroyed by the Allies, in regard of
50 merchant ships sunk. Between June and August 1943, 80 U-boats were
destroyed or seriously damaged. Admiral Karl
Dönitz was forced to order his submarines to avoid Allied
convoys. Even if the balance of forces changed within a few weeks, the submarine
threat remained a major one. German naval engineers continued to improve
U-boats and their weapon systems. In September 1943, the Kriegsmarine
introduced the acoustic torpedo that could follow a sound source such
as a propeller. That new weapon had devastating effects until the Allies
came up with a sound-producing device that attracted the torpedo far enough
from the hull so that it would explode without causing harm. In early
1944, the schnorkel was introduced, a device that allowed a continuous
supply of fresh air while the submarine was just below the surface. U-boats
thus equipped could stay below the surface for days on end, almost invisible
but able to use their powerful diesel engines. Starting in the summer of 1943, the German Navy found itself unable to
regain the advantage in submarine warfare; Allied losses diminished and
merchant ship convoys were now able to deliver supplies unhampered. The
volume of goods to be shipped to Great Britain was enormous: for D-Day
alone, some ten million tonnes of supplies were required. Combined Operations The Royal Canadian Navy ensured convoy escorts operations in the North
Atlantic up to the very last weeks of the war, in May 1945. It also took
part in those large-scale combined (Army, Navy, Air Force) operations
that started in 1943: the invasion of North Africa in November 1942, the
invasion of Sicily in July 1943, the landing of Allied forces in Italy
in September 1943; as well as support operations required for the campaign
in Northwest Europe, from June 6th, 1944, to the Armistice. The Royal Canadian Navy's participation in combined operations took different forms. From 1943 onwards, speedboats patrolled the Channel; Canadian-flagged minesweepers ensured the safe passage of invasion flotillas in mine-infested waters. The RCN landing crafts got Canadian and British soldiers to their destination. And naturally, Canadian frigates and corvettes took part in landing operations, protecting the Allied fleet against enemy submarines and warships. |