“Altogether, a very detailed year-by-year account of escort
development for anti-submarine work from the period between the wars
to post World War II.” —The Nautical Magazine Winston Churchill
famously claimed that the submarine war in the Atlantic was the only
campaign of the Second World War that really frightened him. If the
lifeline to North America had been cut, Britain would never have
survived; there could have been no build-up of US and Commonwealth
forces, no D-Day landings, and no victory in western Europe.
Furthermore, the battle raged from the first day of the war until the
final German surrender, making it the longest and arguably
hardest-fought campaign of the whole war. The ships, technology and
tactics employed by the Allies form the subject of this book.
Beginning with the lessons apparently learned from the First World
War, the author outlines inter-war developments in technology and
training, and describes the later preparations for the second global
conflict. When the war came the balance of advantage was to see-saw
between U-boats and escorts, with new weapons and sensors introduced
at a rapid rate. For the defending navies, the prime requirement was
numbers, and the most pressing problem was to improve capability
without sacrificing simplicity and speed of construction. The author
analyses the resulting designs of sloops, frigates, corvettes and
destroyer escorts and attempts to determine their relative
effectiveness. “Atlantic Escorts has flowed from the pen of a master
who has written so many fine books about the history of ship
construction. It is a small masterpiece.” —Warship International
Fleet Review
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Ships, Weapons & Tactics in World War II
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781783469017
Publisert
2014
Utgiver
Independent Publishers Group (Chicago Review Press)
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter