Operation Lobster

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In 1940 the Germans decided to send agents and saboteurs to infiltrate Britain from Norway and Northern France. This plan was given the codename Operation Lobster (Unternehmen Hummer). It remained in place despite the collapse of plans for Operation Sealion "Unternehmen Seelöwe".

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[edit] Military context

After victory in France, the Abwehr had been tasked with retrieving current, firm data on British defenses and war making capability. Three days before the end of the German campaign in France on June 25, 1940, Abwehr II's war diary noted:

"On the direction of the Head of Division (Lahousen [Generalmajor Erwin von Lahousen]) Abwehr II's work has in the main been switched over to the war with England. In addition, preparations are being made for work overseas. The only work in the east now concerns looking after the Ukrainian minority and transferring old contacts to Abwehr III. At the same time Abwehr II's work in Holland, Belgium and France is diminishing and being transferred."

The Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (OKW) issued planning directives asking Abwehr I/II for:

  • data regarding the state of Britain's defenses,
  • data on the feasibility of a German invasion force landing on the island of Ireland
  • data on the creation/insertion of a 'fifth column' into Britain which could perform sabotage and link up with any invading German ground troops.

Lobster was controlled by Major Klug of Office WN 2 (Abwehr II) in Berlin. Lobster involved sending missions to Britain by a variety of means, but generally by sea.

Lobster was in the context of Operation Sealion "Unternehmen Seelöwe" which in turn involved Plan Green "Plan Grün". Before events in the military sphere overtook plans for the launching of Sealion, the Abwehr successfully inserted almost twenty agents into Britain and Ireland between the summer and early autumn of 1940.

[edit] Notable operations involving Ireland

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