THIS ILLUSTRATED STUDY EXPLORES, IN DETAIL, THE CLIMACTIC EVENTS OF
THE BATTLE OF THE ATLANTIC, AND HOW AIR POWER PROVED TO BE THE ALLIES'
MOST IMPORTANT SUBMARINE-KILLER IN ONE OF THE MOST BITTERLY FOUGHT
NAVAL CAMPAIGNS OF WORLD WAR II.
As 1942 opened, both Nazi Germany and the Allies were ready for the
climactic battles of the Atlantic to begin. Germany had 91 operational
U-boats, and over 150 in training or trials. Production for 1942–44
was planned to exceed 200 boats annually. Karl Dönitz, running the
Kriegsmarine's U-boat arm, would finally have the numbers needed to
run the tonnage war he wanted against the Allies.
Meanwhile, the British had, at last, assembled the solution to the
U-boat peril. Its weapons and detection systems had improved to the
stage that maritime patrol aircraft could launch deadly attacks on
U-boats day and night. Airborne radar, Leigh lights, Magnetic Anomaly
Detection (MAD) and the Fido homing torpedo all turned the
anti-submarine warfare (ASW) aircraft into a submarine-killer, while
shore and ship-based technologies such as high-frequency direction
finding and signals intelligence could now help aircraft find enemy
U-boats. Following its entry into the war in 1941, the United States
had also thrown its industrial muscle behind the campaign, supplying
VLR Liberator bombers to the RAF and escort carriers to the Royal
Navy. The US Navy also operated anti-submarine patrol blimps and VLR
aircraft in the southern and western Atlantic, and sent its own escort
carriers to guard convoys.
This book, the second of two volumes, explores the climactic events of
the Battle of the Atlantic, and reveals how air power – both
maritime patrol aircraft and carrier aircraft – ultimately proved to
be the Allies' most important weapon in one of the most bitterly
fought naval campaigns of World War II.
Les mer
The climax of World War II’s greatest naval campaign
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781472841544
Publisert
2021
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter