Operation Chariot, the St Nazaire Raid, was carried out on the 28 March 1942.
The Channel Dash by the Scharnhorst and Gneisenau was on the 11th to 13th of February, 1942.
The object of the raid was to deny the Germans a repair facility for large ships on the Atlantic coast.
Scharnhorst and Gneisenau operated together for much of the early portion of World War II, including sorties into the Atlantic to raid British merchant shipping. During her first operation, Scharnhorst sank the auxiliary cruiser HMS Rawalpindi in a short engagement (November 1939). Scharnhorst and Gneisenau participated in Operation Weserübung (April–June 1940), the German invasion of Norway. During operations off Norway, the two ships engaged the battlecruiser HMS Renown and sank the aircraft carrier HMS Glorious as well as her escort destroyers Acasta and Ardent. In that engagement Scharnhorst achieved one of the longest-range naval gunfire hits in history.
HMS Glorious: Captain D'Oyley Hughes VC was in such a hurry to get back to Scapa to court martial one or two of his senior air officers for lack of offensive spirit that he sailed off with only two destroyers, grounded all flights and so had no CAP aloft. He had Swordfish torpedo bombers, but nothing was ready to fly and so instead of going down in history as the the first carrier to sink a capital ship in war, the Glorious went down as the first, and perhaps the last, aircraft carrier sunk by capital ships. The battleship admirals worldwide must have been happy.
Today in WW2 history-few ships were steaming in the Pacific to join with others in a little party known now as "Doolitle Raid"
I think we all know the outcome.
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At the time of her sinking, yes, HMS Glorious probably held that dubious honour. However, its worthy of note that although the definition of 'capital ship' referred to battleships and battlecruisers at the start of WWII, it evolved as the war went on. Numerous carriers went on to be sunk by the new 'capital ship' - the aircraft carrier itself - but of course its the air wing there that actually deals out the blows. USS Gambier Bay (CVE-73) was probably the last carrier to have been sunk by gunfire from a near-capital ship, the Japanese heavy cruiser Chikuma.
Reminds us also that had Yamamoto not turned tail after losing his carriers at Midway he almost certainly could have sunk the American carriers with his battleships and cruisiers and salvaged a Pyrrhic victory that would have left Japan with the Shokaku and Zuikaku, and the USN with only the Saratoga. And if the Japanese had not been suffering from "victory disease" in 1942, they would not have divided their resources, by simultaneously sending the Ryujo and Junyo to mess around in the Aleutians. When sitting in the lifeboats one officer, perhaps it was Fuchida said, "If Shokaku and Zuikaku had been here this catastrophe would never have happened". Both had suffered aircrew losses at the Battle of the Coral Sea and were sent home to reinforce and retrain their aircrews, rather than consolidating both crews onto one carrier and including her in the Midway task force. Anyway, if any one man won the Pacific War, it was Wade McCluskey. Plenty of eternal lessons there.
Good stuff. I highly recommend the book Shattered Sword: The Untold Story of the Battle of Midway if you haven't read it already.
I personally think the Battle of Midway was the turning point of WW2. If the US had lost that battle, they would have left the entire Pacific West Coast open to attack by the IJN. They would be forced to defend the mainland and not be able to commit as much to their forces in the Pacific as well as England/ Russia. The U.K. was just about on its knees at that point so the additional help was definitely appreciated. The victory was also a morale boost seeing as there had been nothing but defeats up to that point ( ok, call the Coral Sea a draw).
Fuchida(?) was right: it would have been better to have brought both the Shokaku and Zuikaku even with under-strength crews, since it was always be better to have another deck to land on, rather than having to ditch aircraft if no other decks remained serviceable.
Training in critical thinking and emotional detachment must be as important for senior officers as any professional training, and yet at times that spark of emotion, of irrational "spirit" is the key to victory. Inherent contradictions; no wonder blunders are made!
Yamamoto, who knew more about American industrial power than most of his senior officers, allowed himself to be persuaded that it was better to "run away and fight another day", and yet he clearly knew that the US would never negotiate and that Japan therefore had only one chance. If they delayed to rebuild their strength after Midway they would gain nothing: American production would overwhelm them. What point then in preserving the Yamato, the fleet and his own life? In the unlikely event he died in battle at Midway in the act of winning even a Pyrrhic victory he would have become a demi-god in Japan and an enormous inspiration to the whole country. Instead, he went home to the ignominy of defeat and what was probably "suicide-by-enemy" a year later, a blow which merely depressed and demoralized the country. But then to go from the crest of victory to the depths of defeat in an hour would test anyone's judgement.
But the half-measures began at Pearl Harbour: the islands could easily have been seized by a powerful landing force at the outset, they were totally unprepared for such an attack. Having lost Haiwaii, the USN would have had to retire either to Australia, the Philippines or the the American west coast. The Phillipines would have been "out of the pan and into the fire", Australia could not support the fleet materially, so the west coast would have been the only option!
The next step would have been the Panama Canal, but even had that been seized, the remaining American ships in the Pacific destroyed, and attacks made on the west coast ports, what chance was there of final victory, which could only come as Yamamoto said, if they marched into Washington and dictated it at the White House?
Extra points if you can name ALL the turning points.![]()
Japan didn't invade Hawaii because they couldn't support an invasion that far from home, and they knew it. The whole point of the raid was to neutralize the American battleships (with the US carriers a secondary target) in the hope that the US could be frightened out of a war with Japan by a major defeat on Day 1. The Japanese didn't even have two vital targets in their attack plan, the machine shops and fuel tank farm. Knocking those out would've meant that Pearl Harbor would have been useless as a naval base until those were rebuilt, which would have taken about a year.
Distances in the Pacific are very much greater than the North Atlantic, greatly affecting the belligerents' ability to support invasions. The farthest the Japanese ever attempted was at Midway, and it took almost the entire Combined Fleet to protect the invasion transports and (attempt to) neutralize Midway's airfield.
The USN got VERY lucky when Admiral Nagumo dithered over what his main target should be when an American carrier was sighted northeast of Midway. That, Japanese intelligence errors (assuming Spruance and Fletcher had only two carriers, not three), and suicidal sacrifice by US TBF torpedo bomber crews allowed the Americans to dive bomb Nagumo's carriers without fighter opposition. Add in the bombs/torpedoes sitting on decks not in magazines from Japanese rearming and it became a catastrophe for Japan.
Yamamoto realized that he had NO air cover available after the US sank all Nagumo's carriers, meaning he was a sitting duck if he attempted to continue the invasion of Midway. Remembering what Japan's carrier air power did to the USN at Pearl less than 8 months earlier, and not knowing what the US had available in air strength on their two surviving carriers and Midway's air field, he folded his hand and retreated to fight another day.
Realistically, the Americans couldn't have done a whole lot of damage to the Japanese combined fleet, even if they'd tried to. Admiral Spruance had almost no torpedo planes left, few surface ships (and none that could hope to match Yamato), and exhausted air crews. There were few planes left on Midway, and almost no torpedo planes. There were a few B-17's, but they couldn't do much to a retreating fleet, and the Combined Fleet would soon be out of range anyway.
Extra points if you can name ALL the turning points.![]()