A GRIPPING ACCOUNT OF THE MOST FAMOUS CONVOY OPERATION OF THE WAR,
WHICH MARKED A HIGH-WATER MARK FOR THE GERMAN NAVAL CAMPAIGN IN THE
ARCTIC.
The Arctic was a vital conduit for transporting supplies directly from
Great Britain to Russia. The British Home Fleet was tasked with
protecting these convoys, which passed within range of the German
bases in Norway. By 1942, the Germans had reinforced their air and
naval forces, stationing a powerful naval surface group there centred
around the battleship _Tirpitz_.
Convoy PQ-17 was set to be the last convoy to sail until the autumn of
1942, and was a particularly large one, involving 35 merchant ships,
over half of which were American. When it departed Reykjavik on 27
June, bound for Archangel, the Germans were ready and waiting. The
convoy was the first large joint Anglo-American naval operation under
British command.
Here, expert naval historian Angus Konstam documents the withdrawal of
the Allied close escort to intercept the German raiders, and the
devastating attacks on the scattered merchant ships by German aircraft
and U-boats. Maps and diagrams plot the passage and fate of the convoy
elements, and stunning artworks bring to life key moments of their
efforts to escape. In the end, 24 Allied ships were sunk, and only ten
merchant ships and four auxiliaries reached the port of Archangel.
PQ-17 would prove to be the worst convoy loss of World War II, and the
most controversial.
Les mer
Disaster in the Arctic
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781472864284
Publisert
2025
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter