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Part 5 of the continuing story of the Bismarck and HMS Hood |
Part 5 Operation Rheinbung As the German battlecruisers Scharnhorst and Gneisenau docked in the occupied French port of Brest on March 22nd, 1941, the officers and crew must have felt the satisfaction of a mission well done. Over the winter months of 1940/41 these two ships, under the command of no less then the fleet chief himself, Admiral Gunther Lutjens, had destroyed or captured twenty-two Allied ships totaling one hundred and sixteen thousand tons. As the last island of democary and freedom in Europe, Britain stood alone against the Nazi war machine that had burned across Europe since September of 1939. Her only hope for survival was a tenuous link to the great democarcies in the west, the United States of America and the Dominion of Canada. Numerous supply convoys risked a three thousand mile journey through the treachous North Atlantic, infested with German U-boats, to provide food, munitions, medical supplies, fuel oil and numerous other goods that a nation needed to survive and fight. By 1941, Britain required a million tons of imports per week and the Nazi's were well aware of Britains dependency on imported materials. Flush with success of the Scharnhorst and the Gneisenau, the Naval High Command now had much larger ambitions. The plan was to send into the Atlantic a powerful battle force consisting of two battleships, the Bismarck and the Tirpitz along with the battlecruisers Scharnhorst and Gneisenau. This flexing of German Naval muscle would go by the code name "Operation Rheinbung". The "Battle of the Atlantic" was about to enter a new chapter and the survival of Britain depended on its outcome. (to be continued) |