Operation Harpoon (1942)
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Operation Harpoon | |||||||
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Part of World War II | |||||||
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Combatants | |||||||
United Kingdom | Italy | ||||||
Commanders | |||||||
Henry Harwood | Alberto da Zara | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
1 battleship 2 aircraft carriers 4 cruiser >9 destroyers 1 minesweeper 6 merchantmen |
2 cruisers 5 destroyers Land-based bomber & torpedo aircraft |
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Casualties | |||||||
2 destroyers sunk 4 merchantmen sunk 2 cruiser damaged 5 destroyers damaged 1 minesweeper damaged 1 merchantman damaged |
1 destroyer damaged |
Mediterranean Campaign |
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Mers-el-Kebir – Calabria – Spada – Taranto – Spartivento – Matapan – Tarigo – Crete – Duisburg – Bon – 1st Sirte – 2nd Sirte – Harpoon – Pedestal – Torch – Skerki – Sicily |
In World War II, Operation Harpoon was one of two simultaneous Allied convoys sent to supply Malta in the Axis-dominated Mediterranean Sea in mid-June 1942. One convoy, Operation Vigorous, left Alexandria. The other, Harpoon, travelled in the opposite direction from Gibraltar. Both convoys met with fierce Axis opposition and only two of seventeen merchant ships completed the journey, at the cost of several Allied warships.
They were followed by Operation Pedestal.
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[edit] Background
Until the French surrender and Italy's declaration of war, the Mediterranean had been an Allied "lake". The French Fleet and the Royal Navy's Mediterranean Fleet dominated the only potential and credible adversary, Italy's Regia Marina.
The French surrender and its consequences changed that. The French Fleet became a potentially potent threat in Axis hands and so was, in part, destroyed, adding to French antipathy towards the British. French bases in North Africa ceased to offer protection to Allied, ie, British, shipping. The Regia Marina possessed potent modern warships, particularly battleships and heavy cruisers, and Italian and Libyan territory provided centrally located bases that could cut British supply routes.
Italy's Libyan territory also threatened Egypt and the strategically important Suez Canal. A catastrophe in Egypt might in turn lead to destablisation of Britain's control of Middle Eastern oil supplies, or even worse, to the Axis gaining control of them. This apocalyptic scenario depended upon Axis forces in North Africa - German and Italian - receiving adequate supplies from Italy.
Malta threatened this Axis supply route, but itself needed regular resupply and reinforcement, in order to be effective and to resist Axis invasion.
By mid-June, 1942, Malta's supply situation had deteriorated. The Luftwaffe had joined the Regia Aeronautica to isolate and starve the island and it had become untenable as an offensive base. Axis armies had advanced into Egypt and Crete thereby acquiring their own advance bases and denying the British safety over much of the eastern Mediterranean.
Fresh aircraft were regularly flown in to Malta, but food and fuel were diminishing. In response, the British invested large amounts of effort to ensure resupply. Two convoys, codenamed Harpoon and Vigorous, were gathered, sailing simultaneously to split the Axis opposition.
A series of British naval disasters in the Mediterranean allowed the Regia Marina to gain naval supremacy in the central Mediterranean. The Italian Fleet took advantage of the situation and moved onto the offensive, blocking or decimating at least three large British convoys bound for Malta. This lead to a number of naval engagements, such as the Second Battle of Sirte, the Battle of Mid-June or Operation Harpoon (plus Operation Vigorous) and finally to Operation Pedestal, all of them favourable to the Axis. The only real success of the Italian Fleet, however, was the attack on the Harpoon convoy.
[edit] The convoyHarpoon left Gibraltar on the 12th June 1942, comprising six merchantmen (Troilus, Burdwan and Orari from Britain; Tanimbar from Holland and the Chant and Kentucky from the USA) carrying a total of 43,000 tons of cargo and oil. They were escorted by a cruiser (HMS Cairo), nine destroyers, a mine-layer (HMS Abdiel) and smaller ships. Distant cover was provided by the battleship HMS Malaya, aircraft carriers HMS Argus and Eagle, cruisers HMS Kenya, Charybdis, Liverpool and destroyers. [edit] The operationThe first Italian air attacks, on the 14th, sunk one freighter, the Tanimbar, south of Sardinia. The cruiser, HMS Liverpool was damaged and returned to Gibraltar. Later on the same day, the covering force also returned to Gibraltar, just before the Strait of Sicily.
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