EASTERN SEA FRONTIER |
WAR DIARY |
APRIL 1942 |
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CHAPTER I |
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THE SUBMARINE SITUATION |
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In
the submarine warfare, April was almost an exact repetition of the preceding
month. Twenty-four vessels, a total of 138,121 tons, were sunk in the
last thirty days. Thus, once again, the Eastern Sea Frontier was the
most dangerous area for merchant shipping in the entire world. Of the
seventy-three ships sunk by enemy submarine action in April, 33% went
down in the Frontier. Seventeen, or 23% of the world total, were lost
in the Mid-Atlantic area, the second largest theatre of U-boat activity.
The remaining thirty-two sinkings were scattered fairly evenly over
the face of the oceans. |
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The pattern and rhythm of attack was likewise much the same as in the preceding month. Thirteen sinkings, concentrated in the first ten days, were followed by two weeks of reduced activity on the part of the Germans. But by the end of the month the tempo of loss was rising again. It seems reasonable to infer from this that during the middle of April the replacement process noticed in the March diary was again taking place during the period in which the comparative lull occurred. | ||||
No great change in the methods of attack took place. Submarines still preferred to operate ordinarily at night and they frequently supplemented torpedoes with gunfire. The favorite field of activity remained Hatteras, though toward the end of the month it was apparent that a slow shift to the south was taking place. This too conformed to the trend | ||||
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observed in previous months. From the very beginning
of the submarine war off Montauk in January, a gradual movement down
the coast has been discernable. The exact number of U-boats operating
at any one time has proved very difficult to calculate, but a reasonable
estimate would seem to be between five and eight within the Frontier. |
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From
the beginning of the war there has been a belief that enemy agents or
sympathizers have been assisting U-boats in their campaigns. Such assistance
could have many forms--fueling the submarines from isolated places along
the coast, radioing information about ship departures, meeting them
at sea in small boats filled with oil and provisions. There have also
been rumors about neutral vessels or German supply ships that lie off
the coast to tend the submarines. Thus far it has been difficult if
not impossible to obtain conformation for these reasonable beliefs. |
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But
this month strong circumstantial evidence was provided through an analysis
of submarines movements. In the third week of January, five U-boats
passed Bermuda headed in the direction of the Florida Straits. During
the next two weeks there were a number of reports received of sightings
of enemy submarines off the Florida Coast and the Gulf of Mexico, but
there were no attacks made in these areas until February 16th when several
were made by a number of the enemy near Aruba. In the following two
days the submarines were active around Martinique and Trinidad. |
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It is a fair conclusion that these attacks were carried out by the submarines known to have passed Bermuda, since no U-boats were | ||
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located on courses leading to the Caribbean during
the first part of February. If this conclusion is correct it suggests
that these submarines were fueled and their crews rested somewhere in
the Western Caribbean. |
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This
pattern has recently been repeated. In the last week of March, six U-boats
entered the Caribbean from the northeast but during the first weeks
of April no attacks were reported from the Caribbean area. Ten days
after their arrival was known, three of the submarines appeared off
the Florida and Georgia Coast. It seems again a fair conclusion that
these enemy units came from the Caribbean after a period of rest and
reprovisioning. |
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Pont
is given to this belief by known capabilities of the common, 740-ton,
German undersea boat. The voyage from the Bay of Biscay to Hatteras
takes about seventeen days. This means that a submarine can remain in
these waters only about nine days before returning. If it elects the
round about route through the Caribbean and up to Florida or Georgia,
the operational days are reduced from nine to five. Five active days
out of a cruise of forty-three days would appear uneconomic if some
means of extending the active days were at hand. Such increase in operating
time could obviously be obtained if crews could be rested and ships
refueled on this side of the water. |
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After studying this information, Commander Eastern Sea Frontier reached the conclusion that submarines were quite possibly making rendezvous with tankers flying neutral flags and operating out of Colombia, Venezuela, or Mexico. It was equally possible that they were using some |
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small island, such as Corn Island off Nicaragua, as
a base. For this reason he recommended on April 24th that a thorough
search be made of all small tankers and freighters in the area and of
the small islands off Nicaragua and Honduras. |
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During
the past month the most disturbing single factor about the submarine
warfare has been the fact that it has been maintained with such success.
This success can be traced to several factors but the most important
is the fact that it is impossible to combat the menace with forces of
inadequate strength. The outlook for May is still almost as disturbing
as it was at the beginning of April, though pessimism should be tempered
somewhat by the recognition that ships and planes are gradually accumulating
along this coast and a protective system of considerable strength has
been devised for the merchant vessels in our coastal waters. |
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