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Kara Sea U-boat campaign
Part of the Arctic campaign of the Eastern Front of World War II
Date1 August 1943 - 4 October 1944
LocationKara Sea
Result Indecisive.
Belligerents
Flag of German Reich (1935–1945) Nazi Germany Flag of the Soviet Union 1923 Soviet Union
Strength
6 u-boats (1943 only) ASW units
Casualties and losses
2 u-boats sunk 1 corvette sunk
6 minesweepers sunk

5 merchants sunk and 1 damaged

2 survey vessels sunk
1 salvage ship sunk
1 motorboat sunk

The Kara Sea U-boat campaign was a submarine operation during the WWII in the Arctic waters of Kara Sea. Originally intended as "Operation Wunderland-II" (a follow up of an earlier raid) protracted after the official end of the operations until 1944.

Background[]

Operation Wunderland was a coordined raid of the pocket battleship Admiral Scheer and u-boats in Kara Sea occurred in 1942 resulting in a limited German success. A follow-up similar operation cod-named "Operation Wunderland-II" was planned for 1 August 1943 with involvment of the Lützow but her partecipation was canceled. Despite the official end of Operation Wunderland-II for 4 October 1943, operations in Kara Sea resumed the following year until 4 October 1944.[1]

Wunderland-II Operations[]

On 25 July 1943, Soviet minesweeper T-904 sunk on a mine laid by U-625.[2]

On 27 July 1943, U-255 shelled and sunk the Soviet survey ship Akademik Shokalskij.

On 30 July 1043, U-703 sunk the Soviet minesweeper T-911.

On 5 August 1943, the Soviet motorboat Majakovski (80tons) sunk on a mine laid by U-212.

On 25 August 1943, the Soviet salvage ship ASO-1 Shkval sunk on a mine laid by U-625

On 27 August 1943, U-354 damaged the Soviet merchant Petrovskij (3771 GRT)

On 28 August 1943, U-302 sunk the Soviet merchant Dikson (2920 GRT). On the same day, the Soviet submarine S-101 intercepted and sunk U-639 (the only German loss of the 1943 campaign). On 6 September 1943, the Soviet merchant Tbilisi (7169 GRT) with a cargo of coal, sunk on a mine laid by U-636

On 30 September 1943, U-960 sunk the Soviet merchant Arkhangel´sk (2480 GRT) with a cargo of machinery equipment. The ship was part of the Soviet convoy VA-18

On 1 October 1943, U-960 attacked again the convoy VA-18, sinking the minesweeper T-896. U-703 attacked the same convoy, sinking the merchant Sergej Kirov (4146 GRT) with a cargo of machinery equipment.

1944 operations[]

On 12 August 1944, U-365 attacked the Soviet convoy BD-5: she sunk in successsion the minesweepers T-118, T-114 and finally the merchant Marina Raskova (7540 GRT). Of 632 men from the combined ships, only 186 were saved by minesweeper T-116 and 73 by MBR-2 flying boats.

On 26 August 1944, U-957 sunk with gunfire the Soviet survey vessel Nord. The ship could fire a single shell in defense (missed) before being sunk. On 5 September 1944, Soviet minesweeper T-116 sunk with depth charges U-362.

On 23 September 1944, U-957 attacked the Soviet convoy VD-1 sinking the corvette Brilliant.

On 24 September 1944, U-739 too attacked convoy VD-1, sinking minesweeper T-120.

Outcome[]

The German operations in the Kara Sea had no impact on the Soviet industrial production and the Soviet shipping was only shortly disrupted. However the German operations managed to divert Soviet forces from the operations close Norway.[3]

References[]

  1. David T. Zabecki, (1999). World War II in Europe: An Encyclopedia. p. 1740. 
  2. site|uboat.net, retrieved|11/26/2017, link|https://uboat.net/allies/merchants/search.php
  3. David T. Zabecki, (1999). World War II in Europe: An Encyclopedia. p. 1740. 

Sources[]

All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at Kara Sea U-boat campaign and the edit history here.
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