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The Battle of the Atlantic was the longest campaign of the Second
World War. In a hard-fought and intense struggle to cut off Britain's
maritime supply lines, Germany mobilized submarines (or U-boats),
battleships, battle cruisers, aircraft and mines against Allied
merchant shipping. Substantial British, Canadian and American naval
and air forces were deployed to defeat this challenge. By far the
greatest threat came from the U-boat.
For the first nine months of the war, U-boats operated in British
waters and surface ships in the Atlantic. There were few U-boats
available and not all had the range to be ocean-going. The Royal
Navy, which introduced the convoy system at the outset, was short
of escort vessels. Therefore, many merchant ships still had to sail
independently and losses from this category, as they would be throughout
the campaign, were much heavier than from convoys. Mixed results
were achieved; by the end of April 1940 the Germans had sunk 800,000
tons of shipping, but lost 22 submarines.
The fall of France in June 1940 gave the U-boats bases on the Atlantic
coast, increasing their range and the threat they posed to the sea
lanes. Over the autumn, Allied losses rose sharply. A significant
growth in U-boat production from spring 1941 allowed Dönitz,
the U-boat commander, to exploit new tactics whereby his submarines
attacked in groups or "wolf packs". In response, the Royal
Navy, with the help of the Royal Canadian Navy, extended the convoy
system right across the North Atlantic. Intelligence successes allowed
evasive routeing of convoys away from danger and reduced losses
for the rest of 1941.
After America's entry into the war the unpreparedness of the US
Navy allowed the Germans to wreak massive destruction amongst shipping
on the American eastern seaboard during the first half of 1942.
When the situation was stabilised by the introduction of a convoy
system, the wolf packs returned to mid-Atlantic. The massive success
of their onslaught was helped by the Allies' temporary loss of ability
to read U-boat signals. By the end of 1942, Allied shipping was
in crisis.
Losses reached devastating levels again in March 1943 but, thereafter,
very effective Allied counter-measures including the introduction
of escort support groups, some with aircraft carriers, and Very
Long Range aircraft to close the air gap in mid-Atlantic quickly
brought a decisive end to the U-boat threat. Although U-boats would
continue to operate until the end of the war, the Germans had lost
the Battle of the Atlantic by the end of May 1943.
September 1939 - May 1940
June 1940 - December 1941
December 1941 - December 1942
January 1943 - May 1943
June 1943 - May 1945
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