This week in the War, 16–22 June 1941: If Hitler invaded Hell…

Churchill [Public domain, IWM, wiki]

Churchill [Public domain, IWM, wiki]

“If Hitler invaded Hell, I would at least make a favourable reference to the Devil in the House of Commons,” Churchill joked to his private secretary. This week in the war, on the evening of 22 June 1941, Churchill broadcast a speech addressing the momentous  turn of events: the fact that Hitler’s Germany had invaded the Soviet Union.

“Hitler is a monster of wickedness, insatiable in his lust for blood and plunder,” Churchill told listeners across the world.

Despite his experts’ gloomy forecasts as to how long the Russians could hold out, he was optimistic.

Churchill named what he saw as the four great turning points of the war thus far: (1) the disastrous fall of France, (2) the RAF’s triumph in the Battle of Britain, (3) Roosevelt’s Lend-Lease, and (4) Hitler’s latest aggression, this time on an unprecedented scale, against the Soviet Union.

Churchill did not mince words. “I see also the dull, drilled, docile, brutish masses of the Hun soldiery plodding on like a swarm of locusts.” The speech is quoted in its entirety by Graham Stewart in his book His Finest Hours—The War Speeches of Winston Churchill (Quercus, London. 2007).

Despite being a fervent anti-Bolshevik, Churchill declared that the Soviet Union, or any other state that stood up to Nazism, could count on Britain’s aid. As always in such broadcasts, he made reference to America, declaring that Russia’s danger was Britain’s, too, and that of the United States.

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This week in the War, 16–22 June 1941: Barbarossa!

German panzer troops advance from Poland at the beginning of Operation Barbarossa, June 1941 [Bundesarchiv Bild 101l-185-0139-21/ Grimm, Arthur/ CC-BY-SA

German panzer troops advance from Poland at the beginning of Operation Barbarossa, June 1941 [Bundesarchiv Bild 101l-185-0139-21/ Grimm, Arthur/ CC-BY-SA]

On 22 June 1941, Hitler launched Operation Barbarossa. Over three and a half million troops with 3,600 tanks and 2,700 planes invaded the Soviet Union on a front that extended from the Baltic coast to the shores of the Black Sea.

The Fuehrer directed the operation from the Wolfsschanze (The Wolf’s Lair), situated near Rastenburg in East Prussia. The Germans had assembled their enormous force without the Russians recognizing the danger. They were caught completely by surprise. By noon, the Luftwaffe had destroyed 1,200 Russian aircraft, mostly on the ground.

That evening, Winston Churchill declared Britain’s willingness to aid the Soviet Union. Britain had acquired a new and powerful ally. With Hitler focused on the East, defeat for the island nation no longer seemed inevitable.

Meanwhile, on the same day that Barbarossa got under way, General Wavell, one of Britain’s most competent commanders,  was relieved as Commander-in-Chief of British Middle Eastern Forces; he was reassigned to India.

Operation Barbarossa, the German invasion of the Soviet Union, June 1941

Operation Barbarossa, the German invasion of the Soviet Union, June 1941

 

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This week in the War, 9–15 June 1941: Eighty-eights blunt Battleaxe in Hellfire Pass

Soldiers of Rommel's Afrika Korps haul one of their 88mm flak/anti-tank guns across the desert, North Africa, 1941 [Bundesarchiv Bild 101l-783-0109-19/ Dorner/ CC-BY-SA, wiki]

Soldiers of Rommel’s Afrika Korps haul one of their 88mm flak/anti-tank guns across the desert, North Africa, 1941 [Bundesarchiv Bild 101l-783-0109-19/ Dorner/ CC-BY-SA, wiki]

If the Luftwaffe had the Messerschmitt 109, and the Kriegsmarine the U-boat, then the German army could surely claim the eighty-eight millimetre anti-tank (originally anti-aircraft) gun. It was the weapon that never lost its edge.

Diverting resources for an expeditionary force to Greece and for the ill-fated defence of Crete had cost Britain at least one chance for victory in the North Africa campaign. Churchill continued to press Wavell to begin a new offensive. Despite his misgivings, the latter launched Operation Battleaxe this week in the war, on 15 June 1941.

Soldiers of the 4th Indian Division decorate their truck during Operation Battleaxe, North Africa, June 1941 [Public domain, Imperial War Museum, wiki]

Soldiers of the 4th Indian Division decorate their truck during Operation Battleaxe, North Africa, June 1941 [Public domain, Imperial War Museum, wiki]

The attack, planned and commanded by General Beresford-Peirse, included a frontal assault on Halfaya Pass, which was quickly nicknamed Hellfire Pass. The idea was for General Frank Messervy’s 4th Indian Division to take and hold the pass, thus supporting an armoured thrust by the tanks of the 7th Armoured Division, who would defeat the enemy in a decisive tank battle. The road to Tobruk would thus be opened, and Tobruk’s beleaguered garrison would join in the fight and rout the remnants of Rommel’s Afrika Korps. Such was the plan for Operation Battleaxe.

Wavell was not optimistic. He knew that the new British Cruiser tanks were unreliable and that the Matilda’s were vulnerable to anti-tank fire. Plus the superiority in numbers, in artillery and in air power, that would be essential for success was simply not there. (It would be there later, for Montgomery).

In the end, the attack on Halfaya Pass was bloodily repulsed and the British armour decimated by the German 88s. Rommel’s spies had discovered the British plan and his forces had been lying in wait, with the 88mm anti-tank guns dug in and carefully concealed.

The tables were suddenly turned. German panzer units advanced and were outflanking the British positions, intent in cutting off any possible retreat. Messervy ordered a general withdrawal.

By the time Wavell had flown in from his headquarters, Operation Battleaxe was at an end. That the British forces escaped at all was due to the fighting qualities of the men on the ground, the tankers and the gunners, and to the pilots of the RAF.

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Vignette: Les amants de Carcassonne—The Lovers of Carcassonne

Les amants de Carcassonne --- by L.F. Bollee and Luca Malisan [Photograph by Edith-Mary Smith]

Les amants de Carcassonne — by L.F. Bollee and Luca Malisan [Photograph by Edith-Mary Smith]

If your taste in poetry is inclined towards the pure and noble, but at the same time, tragic, you need look no further than France’s Joë Bousquet (1897–1950).

He was born in Narbonne, in the land of the Cathars and was, in spirit, much like his Cathar ancestors: ascetic, seeking to lead a simple life. Their rejection of the authority of the clergy led to their persecution and an eventual crusade against the Carthars that saw their cities attacked and, in the case of Carcassonne, subjected to a lengthy siege (in 1209). As one sees from the photograph below, the ancient city has changed little since medieval times.

Joë was seventeen when the First World War began. He fought in the trenches, became the most decorated officer in his regiment, and was wounded close to the war’s end by a bullet that struck his spine.

Carcassonne, view of the ramparts [Author: Christophe Eyquem, Creative Commons 3.0 Unported]

Carcassonne, view of the ramparts [Author: Christophe Eyquem, Creative Commons 3.0 Unported]

Joë Bousquet never walked again. He was paralysed from the waist down, bedridden for the rest of his life, and in constant pain. Sometimes, he smoked opium to relieve it. Always he wrote.

He corresponded with and was visited by many writers, and a series of his love-letters, written post-war to a young woman he called Linette, have recently been published.

Linette is likely the name he gave her to honour a Linette that once he’d known. (Joë was in the habit of giving nice-sounding names to his female acquaintances).

Fans of the bande dessinée (French comic-strip) genre will appreciate Les amants de Carcassonne (The Lovers of Carcassonne) created by writer LF Bollée and artist Luca Malisan, with colours by Dimitri Fogolin (Editions du Patrimoine/Glénat, 2012). The book is set in Carcassonne during World War II and tells the story (based on truth) of Joë Bousquet and his relationship with (the first) Linette. Occasionally, Joë amuses Linette with stories of his Cathar ancestors, sometimes weaving himself and Linette into the tales as characters. Thus pictures of Nazis and WWII France are punctuated from time to time with illustrations of the siege of 1209 and medieval knights.

For the interested (maybe non-French speaking) reader, the story is as follows:

Page 3: Linette arrives in Carcassonne, by bus. It is August 1944. Although much of France has been liberated, Carcassonne is still occupied by the German army.

Pages 4–8: A flashback that shows why Linette is on her own. German soldiers (actually SS) arrive in her village—which is called Bousquet (like the poet)—and search for weapons. Linette and her sister Marinette run away with their father’s old shotgun, meaning to hide it. The Germans spot them and open fire. Marinette is killed, but Linette escapes. Her father and young brother are not so lucky. They are shot. With her mother already dead (through giving birth to her brother), Linette is now an orphan.

Pages 9–13: Now in Carcassonne, Linette’s old school teacher (Mademoiselle Roland) has put her in touch with an older couple who find her a job as secretary, taking dictation from the poet Joë Bousquet.

Pages 13–14: Linette looks out from her room and admires a scene of resistance in the street.

Pages 15–17: A tender scene where Joë invites Linette to take off her clothes in order to dry them. It has been raining. He promises to close his eyes. In the end, he peeks.

Pages 18–20: Joë makes amends by delighting her with a tale of the Cathars. The characters of Joë and Linette are there in medieval garb.

Pages 21–25: Given what has happened to her family, Linette is ready to join the fight against the Germans. She carries messages for the French Resistance and only escapes being caught by hiding in a cellar. The man of the house where she is hiding is taken away.

Pages 26–31: More tales of the Cathars. A young man from the Resistance (his name is André but his Resistance name is Musset; Linette’s Resistance name is Camille) visits Joë and requests him to publish coded messages as part of his next poems.

Pages 32–39: Cathar resistance scenes mingle with similar scenes of WWII resistance. Joë and Linette star in both. She helps André when he is wounded. (Page 38 has a clever trio of drawings, comparing Joë prostrate in his bed with Joë as a wounded Cathar knight and then with Joë as he was when he lay wounded in the trenches of the First World War).

Page 40: Linette helps the Resistance when they receive an aerial arms drop.

Page 41: The older woman (Linette is staying with her and her husband) advises Joë against becoming attached to Linette: “She is not for you, this Linette… too young, too virginal, too spirited! and not cultivated enough…”

Pages 42–46: Carcassonne is liberated, but some Germans remain in the city. Linette becomes involved and is captured.

Pages 47–48: The story ends with Joë in his room. We are told that André survives the war but never pursues his intended study of medicine. He goes into politics. As for Joë, himself: he finds a new secretary, a young woman with whom he eventually enters into an amorous correspondence. Her name is Jacqueline. She never understands why Joë insists on calling her ‘Linette’.

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This week in the War, 2–8 June 1941: The Syria-Lebanon Campaign

British twenty-five pounder field gun in action during the advance into Syria, June 1941 [Public domain, Imperial War Museum, wiki]

British twenty-five pounder field gun in action during the advance into Syria, June 1941 [Public domain, Imperial War Museum, wiki]

On 8 June 1941, British, Commonwealth and Free French forces invaded Syria and Lebanon to attack the Vichy-French garrisons. The aim was to prevent the German army and Luftwaffe from developing bases that would threaten the British hold on Egypt.

Vichy-French leader Admiral François Darlan had already signed the so-called Paris Protocols, granting Germany access to military facilities in Syria, and Luftwaffe and Italian aircraft had already made refueling stops in Syria en route to supplying anti-British forces in Iraq. British access to Middle-Eastern oil was at risk.

The Syria-Lebanon campaign was commanded by Britain’s Lieutenant General Henry Maitland Wilson from his headquarters in Jerusalem. Nicknamed ‘Jumbo’ on account of his bulk, Wilson was a 60-year-old veteran of the Boer war and had fought at Passchendaele and on the Somme. He had long been an advocate for mobile warfare, with motorized infantry and tanks, and was no slouch when it came to tactics.

An Australian soldier stands in the cockpit of a captured Vichy French Marcel Bloch bomber, Rayak, Syria 1941 [Public domain, Australian War Memorial]

An Australian soldier stands in the cockpit of a captured Vichy French Marcel Bloch bomber, Rayak, Syria 1941 [Public domain, Australian War Memorial]

Wilson launched a three-pronged assault, the most westerly prong running north along the coast, the most easterly crossing over the Golan heights.

The Vichy troops mounted a skilled defence—at sea and in the air, as well as on the land. In a destroyer-versus-destroyer engagement, the French crippled HMS Janus and continued with an air attack attack with Bloch bombers and Dewoitine D.520 fighters. A dogfight ensued with RAF Hurricanes, while HMS Janus limped into the safety of Alexandria.

Chapters 16 through 20 of England’s Last War Against France by Colin Smith present a detailed and highly readable account of the Syria-Lebanon campaign.

Damascus fell on 21 June. The Allied victory was front-page news, but the world’s attention would prove short-lived. The following day, Hitler launched Operation Barbarossa.

Australian soldiers take a refreshing foot bath in an ancient Roman aqueduct in Syria, June 1941 [Public domain, Australian War Memorial]

Australian soldiers take a refreshing foot bath in an ancient Roman aqueduct in Syria, June 1941 [Public domain, Australian War Memorial]

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This week in the War, 26 May–1 June 1941: Sink the Bismarck!

Sinking of HMS Hood, 24 May 1941; painting by J.C. Schmitz-Westerholt [Public domain, wiki]

Sinking of HMS Hood, 24 May 1941; painting by J.C. Schmitz-Westerholt [Public domain, wiki]

“Sink the Bismarck, at any cost,” was the order that Winston Churchill gave to the Royal Navy when the world’s most powerful battleship was on the rampage in the North Atlantic. After a long and harrowing chase, Churchill’s wish was granted, this week in the war. On 27 May 1941, units of Britain’s Home fleet caught up with the German battleship and sank her with great loss of life.

The Bismarck, together with the heavy cruiser Prinz Eugen, were first sighted at anchor in Norway on 21 May. By 23 May, they were in the Atlantic, passing through the Denmark Strait between the coasts of Greenland and Iceland. (German battle-cruisers, Scharnhorst and Gneisenau, had followed the same route, earlier in the year).

The first units of the Home Fleet to give battle were the brand new and not completely finished battleship HMS Prince of Wales and the ageing battle-cruiser HMS Hood, which had been commissioned in 1920 and had long been the pride of the Royal Navy. In a disastrous engagement on 24 May, the Hood was sunk and the Prince of Wales damaged and forced to withdraw. Artist J.C. Schmitz-Westerholt provides a vivid portrayal in the painting above. HMS Prince of Wales is recognizable in the foreground, with her distinctive four-gun fore-turret. Only three of HMS Hood‘s crew of over 1,400 survived.

After the engagement, the Prinz Eugen and the Bismarck went separate ways, and the British Admiralty lost track of them. The Bismarck remained lost until the morning of 26 May, when a Coastal Command Catalina flying boat spotted her steaming at high speed towards the safety of the German-occupied France. If the Bismarck and, afterwards, the Prinz Eugen were to join the Scharnhorst and Gneisenau in Brest, then the four warships would constitute a formidable force if they chose to sail out as a group.

Torpedo attacks by Fairey Swordfish biplanes from the aircraft carrier HMS Ark Royal finally resulted in a lucky hit. The Bismarck‘s rudder was jammed.

Destroyers (including HMS Cossack of ‘Altmark’ fame) shadowed the wounded giant throughout the night. British battleships HMS King George V and HMS Rodney engaged her on the morning of 27 May.

The Bismarck sank a little after 10.30am, perhaps as a result of torpedoes fired from the cruiser HMS Dorsetshire, perhaps as a result of being scuttled by her crew. Of Bismarck‘s complement of over 2,000, just over 100 survived.

Sink the Bismarck --- movie DVD cover [Photograph by Edith-Mary Smith]

Sink the Bismarck — movie DVD cover [Photograph by Edith-Mary Smith]

The blog post by Christopher Chant gives extensive details of the Bismarck‘s foray into the Atlantic (Operation Rheinubung) and her eventual sinking.

For movie-goers who enjoy a retrospective, the 1960 black-and-white movie Sink the Bismarck! rekindles the drama of the times, tracing the week-long chase from the viewpoint of the ‘strictly-by-the-book’ Chief of Operations at the British Admiralty, Captain Jonathan Shepard—played by veteran British actor, Kenneth More. Dana Wynter plays WREN Second Officer Anne Davis, who supplies the love interest. It fails to blossom until the end of the movie when the Bismarck has been sunk and the two of them emerge into the sunlight from the Admiralty bunker. Shepard comments that since it is already nine o’clock, they should go for dinner. Anne points out that it is nine o’clock in the morning, and suggests breakfast instead.

James Bond fans will know that the movie’s director, Lewis Gilbert, also directed The Spy Who Loved Me and Moonraker.

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In the news: Memorial Day 2013

Working Dog Whiskey [Public domain]

Working Dog Whiskey [Public domain]

We honour our troops and veterans on Memorial Day, Monday 27 May 2013.

The above photograph shows Explosive Protection Military Working Dog Whiskey relaxing between the feet of his handler.

The use of dogs in warfare goes back to ancient times. The US K-9 Corps was created on 13 March 1942.

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Book review: Crete, and Consequences

Consequences --- by Penelope Lively (Penguin, UK/Key Porter, Toronto, 2007) [Photograph by Edith-Mary Smith]

Consequences — by Penelope Lively (Penguin, UK/Key Porter, Toronto, 2007) [Photograph by Edith-Mary Smith]

If the span from pre-war to post-Thatcher Britain is a period of time and a setting that would interest you, then read Consequences—by Booker Prize-winner Penelope Lively.

Penelope Lively’s literary gem is both love story and a story of a family through three generations.

The novel begins in London, in St. James’s Park, where Lorna and Matt encounter each other by chance. The young woman is from a wealthy, conservative and judgemental family. The young man is from the working classes, newly trained in the art of wood engraving. He is feeding the ducks, attracting the birds in the hope of sketching them. The two young people fall in love. They marry and move to a rustic cottage in the wilds of Somerset.

The next thing that happens to them is World War II.

It will not give away the plot if I tell you (since it is also mentioned in the write-up on the inside cover) that Matt joins the army, is sent to the Mediterranean, and is killed in May 1941 when German paratroopers invade the island of Crete.

Try Consequences. Read Lively’s wonderful prose, and decide what you think of Lorna and Matt, and some of the sad and joyful times of the twentieth century.

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This week in the War, 19–25 May 1941: The invasion of Crete

German paratroopers descend on Crete from their Junkers transport planes [Public domain, Australian War Memorial]

German paratroopers descend on Crete from their Junkers transport planes [Public domain, Australian War Memorial]

On the morning of 20 May 1941, waves of Junkers 52s flew across the Mediterranean Sea and disgorged thousands of German paratroopers onto the Greek island of Crete. Coloured parachutes had been issued to officers, black for other ranks, and white for boxes of ammunition.

Lieutenant-General Bernard Freyberg looks out from his dug-out during the Battle of Crete, May 1941

Lieutenant-General Bernard Freyberg looks out from his dug-out during the Battle of Crete, May 1941

British and Commonwealth forces had withdrawn from the Greek mainland and established themselves on Crete. The Australians and New Zealanders were present in force, together with a 10,000-strong contingent of Greeks. All were under the command of British-born New Zealander, Major-General Bernard Freyberg.

Freyberg had been forewarned (through Ultra) of the German invasion. His troops were in position, although he was expecting the bulk of the invading force to arrive by sea. The Germans suffered extremely heavy casualties, to the extent that the German C-in-C, General Kurt Student, who was overseeing the operation from the Hotel Grande Bretagne in Athens, was being pressured to withdraw his men. Eventually, the Germans took the airfield at Maleme.

German troop convoys attempting to reach Crete continued to be ravaged by the Royal Navy, which suffered loses of its own. The destroyer HMS Juno, and the cruisers HMSs Fiji and Gloucester were sunk. The aircraft carrier HMS Formidable was so badly damaged that she left for US dockyards to undergo repairs.

Crete: The Battle and the Resistance --- by Antony Beevor (Murray, London, 2005) [Photograph by Edith-Mary Smith]

Crete: The Battle and the Resistance — by Antony Beevor (Murray, London, 2005) [Photograph by Edith-Mary Smith]

In the end, the British and Anzac troops were forced to withdraw and leave the island in Germans hands.  Cretan resistance came to the fore in the wake of the departure of their allies. The entire story is recounted in Crete: The Battle and the Resistance, by Antony Beevor. The author quotes the ninth of General Student’s Ten Commandments of the Parachute Division: “Against a regular enemy fight with chivalry, but give no quarter to guerillas.” The resistance of the people of Crete would provoke extreme reprisals for the remainder of the Second World War.

The last of the Allied soldiers to be evacuated left Crete on the night of 1 June. Loses to Allied forces (including naval forces) were appreciable. As for the Germans: they had suffered over 3,000 dead, all picked-men. Over 150 of the Junkers transport planes had been lost.

The German High Command drew the lesson that parachute operations were too risky, and never again used paratroopers on such a scale. The Allied High Command drew the lesson that parachute operations were effective. Later in the war, the Allies would launch large-scale parachute drops in support of the D-Day landings (Operation Overlord) and the crossing of the Rhine (Operation Market Garden).

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In the news: 15 May, Nylon Stockings Day!

1942: Worn-out nylon (and silk) stockings are collected to be made into parachutes and glider tow ropes [Public domain, wiki]

1942: Worn-out nylon (and silk) stockings are collected to be made into parachutes and glider tow ropes [Public domain, wiki]

Today is Nylon Stockings Day! Nylon was invented by the Du Pont Corporation in New Jersey. On 15 May 1940, Du Pont’s nylon stockings went on sale across the United States.

Pairs that were worn out by 1942 are seen on the left, being donated to aid the war effort. They would be made into parachutes and glider tow ropes.

Betty Grable—the actress with the million-dollar legs—became the poster-person for nylons.

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