German auxiliary cruiser Komet

Career (Nazi Germany)
Operator: Norddeutscher Lloyd
Builder: Bremen Vulkan, DeSchiMAG
Launched: 16 January 1937
Christened: Ems
Homeport: Bremen
Fate: Requisitioned by Kriegsmarine, 1939
Career (Nazi Germany)
Name: Komet
Namesake: Comet
Operator: Kriegsmarine
Builder: Howaldtswerke, Hamburg
Yard number: 7
Acquired: 1939
Commissioned: 2 June 1940
Renamed: Komet (1940)
Reclassified: Auxiliary cruiser (1940)
Nickname: HSK-7
Schiff-45
Raider B
Fate: Sunk on 14 October 1942 after hit by a torpedo near Cap de la Hague.
General characteristics
Displacement: 7,500 tons (3287 GRT)
Length: 115.5 m (379 ft)
Beam: 15.3 m (50 ft)
Draught: 6.5 m (21 ft)
Propulsion: 2 Diesel engines
Speed: 16 knots (30 km/h)
Range: 35,100 nautical miles (65,000 km)
Complement: 274
Armament: (1940) 6 × 15 cm, 1 x 7.5 cm, 1 x 3.7 cm, 4 x 2 cm, 6 x 53.3 cm torpedo tubes, 30 x EMC mines
Aircraft carried: 2 Arado Ar 196 A-1

Komet (German for comet) (HSK-7) was an auxiliary cruiser of the German Kriegsmarine in the Second World War, intended for service as a commerce raider. Known to the Kriegsmarine as Schiff 45, to the Royal Navy she was Raider B.

She was sunk by British motor torpedo boats in October 1942.

Contents

Construction and conversion

Launched on 16 January 1937 as the merchant ship Ems at DeSchiMAG shipyards in Bremen for Norddeutscher Lloyd (NDL), she was requisitioned at the start of the Second World War in 1939, converted into an auxiliary cruiser at Howaldtswerke in Hamburg, and commissioned into the Kriegsmarine on 2 June 1940. The ship was 115.5 m long and 15.3 m wide, had a draught of 6.5 m, and registered 3,287 gross register tons (GRT). She was powered by two diesel engines that gave her a speed of up to 16 knots (30 km/h).

As a commerce raider, Komet was armed with six 15 cm guns, one 7.5 cm gun, one 3.7 cm and four 2 cm AA guns, as well as six torpedo tubes. She also carried a small 15-ton fast boat ("Meteorit", of the "LS2" class) intended to lay mines and an Arado 196 A1 seaplane. Her crew numbered 274.[1]

Initial raiding voyage

Breakout into the Pacific

After a long period of negotiations between Germany and the Soviet Union, the Soviets agreed to provide Germany with access to the Northern Sea Route through which Germany could access both the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.[2] Although the two countries had signed the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact (with secret protocols dividing eastern Europe) and an undisclosed German–Soviet Commercial Agreement (1940) (extensive military and civilian aid pact), the Soviet Union still wished to maintain the veneer of being neutral, and thus, secrecy was required.[2] Initially, the two countries had agreed to send 26 ships, including four armed merchant cruisers, but because of a variety of difficulties, this was soon reduced to one vessel, the Komet.[2]

Prior to being sent on the Northern Sea Route, the Komet was equipped with a specially strengthened bow and a propeller suitable for navigating through ice.[3] Under the command of Kapitän zur See (later Konteradmiral) Robert Eyssen, HSK7 departed for her first raiding voyage from Gotenhafen (now Gydnia in Poland), on 3 July 1940 with a crew of 270.[3] With the consent of the then neutral Soviet Union, Komet initially made her way along the Norwegian coast disguised as the Soviet icebreaker Semyon Dezhnev.[3] While waiting in Teriberka Bay in July and August because of Soviet security concerns, she took the fake name the Donau.[3] With assistance from the Soviet icebreaker Lenin, she passed through the several Arctic Ocean passages in August.[4] She also later received help from the Joseph Stalin.[4] In early September, the Komet crossed the Bering Strait into the Pacific Ocean.[4] The passage navigation was an amazing achievement in itself but would have ended in disaster had it not been for the Soviet assistance, whose help had been at a price – 950,000 Reichsmarks was the reported payment.[4]

Once in the Pacific, Eyssen sailed down to the Japanese island of Lamutrik and met the Orion and Kulmerland in mid-October. After a conference on strategy, the three captains decided to work together, concentrating on the New Zealand to Panama passage taken by most of the Allied merchant ships. They decided on Japanese disguises – Komet and Kulmerland had the names Manyo Maru and Tokio Maru painted on their hulls. By the time they sank the Holmwood and Rangitane, Komet had already been at sea for 140 days and Eyssen admitted in his war diary that he had become depressed and frustrated at not having encountered the enemy.[5]

Raiding in South Pacific waters

In early November, Komet resupplied and refueled in Japan, was disguised as the Japanese merchantman Manio Maru.[6] She operated with the Orion, disguised as Mayebashi Maru and the supply ship Kulmerland, posing as the Tokio Maru. During December, Komet and Orion sank five Allied merchant ships, with a combined tonnage of about 41,000 tons, that had been waiting off the island of Nauru to load phosphate (of which Komet sank three).[7][8] On 27 December 1940 she shelled the phosphate processing and loading facilities on Nauru. Cooperating with the Orion, she sank two more British ships in August 1941 and captured the Dutch 7,300 ton freighter Kota Nopan which was sent as a prize to Bordeaux.

Return voyage

Komet then sailed through the West and East Pacific, around Cape Horn and north through the Atlantic, returning to Cherbourg (France), thus circumnavigating the globe. She reached Hamburg on 30 November 1941 after a voyage of 516 days and about 100,000 nautical miles (190,000 km).

Second raid

Her second raid, under the command of Kapitän zur See Ulrich Brocksien began in early October 1942. However, only a week out of Hamburg, on 14 October, she was attacked by British motor torpedo boats near the Cap de la Hague. She was hit by a torpedo from MTB 236 and sank. There were no survivors.

Komet discovered

The wreck of HK Komet was discovered by nautical archaeologist Innes McCartney off Cap de la Hague in July 2006 and was surveyed by a team led by him in 2007. She is in two halves and upside down, with a large part of the center section blown away by the explosion that sank her. She lies in 70.0 metres (229.7 ft)[9][10] of water.

Raiding career

Victims: (Source)[7][8]

Sunk together with Orion

Notes

  1. ^ "Hilfskreuzer Komet". www.scharnhorst-class.dk. Archived from the original on 8 February 2007. http://web.archive.org/web/20070208211855/http://www.scharnhorst-class.dk/hilfskreuzer/komet.html. Retrieved 24 February 2007. 
  2. ^ a b c Philbin III, Tobias R., The Lure of Neptune: German-Soviet Naval Collaboration and Ambitions, 1919–1941, University of South Carolina Press, 1994, ISBN 0872499928, page 131-7
  3. ^ a b c d Philbin III, Tobias R., The Lure of Neptune: German-Soviet Naval Collaboration and Ambitions, 1919–1941, University of South Carolina Press, 1994, ISBN 0872499928, page 138-9
  4. ^ a b c d Philbin III, Tobias R., The Lure of Neptune: German-Soviet Naval Collaboration and Ambitions, 1919–1941, University of South Carolina Press, 1994, ISBN 0872499928, page 140-1
  5. ^ Rangitane story
  6. ^ "The Komet raider". http://argo.net.au/. http://argo.net.au/andre/raiderKOMETENFIN.htm. Retrieved 24 February 2007. 
  7. ^ a b John Asmussen, Hilfskreuzer (Auxiliary Cruiser) Komet Retrieved 16 October 2010
  8. ^ a b Rafał Kaczmarek (in Polish): Korsarski rejs wśród lodów obu biegunów [Corsair raid through ice of both poles] in: Okręty Wojenne Nr. 11 (1994 r.), p.32-39
  9. ^ Innes McCartney. "Komet that turned fireball". Divernet – Diver Magazine Online. http://www.divernet.com/Wrecks/wrecks_general/159386/komet_that_turned_fireball.html. Retrieved 6 December 2009. 
  10. ^ "The Armed Merchant Raider HK "KOMET"". www.periscopepublishing.com. http://www.periscopepublishing.com/KOMET%20exhibition.htm. Retrieved 24 February 2007. 

References