- 11 Nov 2024 12:53
#15329478
November 11, Monday
British attack Italian fleet in Taranto
Mussolini, whose forces are taking a humiliating battering in Greece, has a new worry tonight. The balance of maritime power in the Mediterranean has been changed by a British air attack which has disabled three Italian battleships in a few minutes. The target is the core of Mussolini’s fleet tucked away in Taranto harbor, in southern Italy, surrounded by anti-aircraft batteries.
The attack, codenamed Operation Judgement, takes place in bright moonlight. Twenty-one Swordfish of the Royal Navy’s Fleet Air Arm fly from the carrier HMS Illustrious, after the carrier HMS Eagle is pulled out at the last moment.
The pathfinders are Swordfish which drop flares. Immediately behind them come the torpedo carriers, swooping from 8,000 to 5,000 feet (2,438 to 1,524 meters) before making a perilous gliding approach to only twenty feet (six meters) above water before releasing their torpedoes as cannon fire erupt around them. In the confined space of the harbor the torpedoes have a devastating impact. At least nine torpedoes strike their targets. In all, seven ships are severely damaged, including the battleships Littorio, Conte di Cavour, and Caio Duilio. As this attack ends, a bomber which had been delayed on take-off arrives to attack a pair of cruisers tucked away in the inner harbor, and soon they too are sinking.
British sources point out that earlier this year the Italian fleet of six battleships and numerous cruisers, destroyers, and submarines was stronger than the Royal Navy in the Mediterranean. Now, however, after suffering earlier losses (two cruisers, nine destroyers, and 25 submarines) Italy is no longer the region’s dominant sea power.
The cost of the latest exploit is two Fleet Air Arm aircraft missing. The crew of one of these is in captivity. The First Lord of the Admiralty, A.V. Alexander, is fond of pointing out that the Fleet Air Arm has destroyed at least 55 enemy aircraft off Norway and the British Isles and in the Mediterranean. A hard-pressed RAF has been augmented by 68 Royal Navy pilots.
In such an attack as Operation Judgement, the stability of the aircraft must be matched by the pilot’s nerve as he flies into enemy gunfire. Confirmation of the raid’s results by photo-reconnaissance is now awaited. The Prime Minister is expected to underline the significance of what he already calls “a determined, successful attack” with a statement in Parliament.
British attack Italian fleet in Taranto
Mussolini, whose forces are taking a humiliating battering in Greece, has a new worry tonight. The balance of maritime power in the Mediterranean has been changed by a British air attack which has disabled three Italian battleships in a few minutes. The target is the core of Mussolini’s fleet tucked away in Taranto harbor, in southern Italy, surrounded by anti-aircraft batteries.
The attack, codenamed Operation Judgement, takes place in bright moonlight. Twenty-one Swordfish of the Royal Navy’s Fleet Air Arm fly from the carrier HMS Illustrious, after the carrier HMS Eagle is pulled out at the last moment.
The pathfinders are Swordfish which drop flares. Immediately behind them come the torpedo carriers, swooping from 8,000 to 5,000 feet (2,438 to 1,524 meters) before making a perilous gliding approach to only twenty feet (six meters) above water before releasing their torpedoes as cannon fire erupt around them. In the confined space of the harbor the torpedoes have a devastating impact. At least nine torpedoes strike their targets. In all, seven ships are severely damaged, including the battleships Littorio, Conte di Cavour, and Caio Duilio. As this attack ends, a bomber which had been delayed on take-off arrives to attack a pair of cruisers tucked away in the inner harbor, and soon they too are sinking.
British sources point out that earlier this year the Italian fleet of six battleships and numerous cruisers, destroyers, and submarines was stronger than the Royal Navy in the Mediterranean. Now, however, after suffering earlier losses (two cruisers, nine destroyers, and 25 submarines) Italy is no longer the region’s dominant sea power.
The cost of the latest exploit is two Fleet Air Arm aircraft missing. The crew of one of these is in captivity. The First Lord of the Admiralty, A.V. Alexander, is fond of pointing out that the Fleet Air Arm has destroyed at least 55 enemy aircraft off Norway and the British Isles and in the Mediterranean. A hard-pressed RAF has been augmented by 68 Royal Navy pilots.
In such an attack as Operation Judgement, the stability of the aircraft must be matched by the pilot’s nerve as he flies into enemy gunfire. Confirmation of the raid’s results by photo-reconnaissance is now awaited. The Prime Minister is expected to underline the significance of what he already calls “a determined, successful attack” with a statement in Parliament.
Society cannot exist, unless a controlling power upon will and appetite be placed somewhere; and the less of it there is within, the more there must be without.
—Edmund Burke
—Edmund Burke