Dönitz: The Last Führer (46 page)

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Authors: Peter Padfield

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In another sense, the balance was bound to tip against Dönitz at some stage, and the process was already well under way. On the very day that the U-boat Command war diary noted ‘the greatest success so far obtained in a convoy battle’
18
the British Commander of the Western Atlantic defences, Admiral Sir Max Horton, wrote to a friend, ‘I really have hopes now that we can turn from the defence to another and better role—killing them.’ He went on:

The real trouble has been basic—too few ships, all too hard worked with no time for training… The Air of course is a tremendous factor, & it is only recently that the many promises that have been made show signs of fulfilment so far as shore-based air is concerned, after three and a half years of war … All these things are coming to a head just now and although the last week has been one of the blackest on the sea, so far as this job is concerned I am really hopeful.
19

The U-boats’ successes had been made possible by the diversion of allied resources to the North African landings, the Pacific campaign and to bombing raids over Europe, aimed first at knocking out the U-boat bases and, when it proved impossible to penetrate the giant concrete shelters provided by Todt and Speer, to crippling German industry in the Ruhr. There were already more than enough long range Liberators to cover the whole North Atlantic convoy routes, and if a fraction of the effort devoted to these ‘offensive’ raids had been spent on the protection of convoys Dönitz’s gloomy forecasts of the late summer of 1942 must have been fulfilled and a great many allied ships and fives saved—not to mention civilians in France and Germany who also paid the price for the mistaken bombing policy. In this sense the crisis in which the allies found themselves in the spring of 1943—and which Dönitz and most German authorities on the U-boat war have used to claim that the Atlantic battle was a close-run thing—was entirely self-induced. There was never a possibility that the U-boats which Dönitz was throwing into the attack could have cut the Atlantic lifeline; directly they threatened to do so, allied resources must have been re-allocated from so-called offensive operations to the defence of this vital artery, and since the contemporary German U-boat had been rendered obsolete by improved aircraft performance and weaponry, his surface and group tactics by radar, this must have proved fatal.

1
Karl Dönitz as a youth

2a
Kaiser Wilhelm II inspects the cadets aboard the
Hertha

2b
The training ship
Hertha

2c
Karl Dönitz as a
Hertha
cadet with two Albanian children

3a
The cruiser
Breslau
after commissioning as
Midilli
in the Turkish Navy

3b
The German officers of the
Midilli
—Dönitz seated front row (left) with iron cross

4a
Karl Dönitz as watch officer of the ‘ace’ Walter Forstmann’s U 35 in 1917

4b
UB 64, a boat of the same class as UB 68 which Dönitz commanded in 1918

5a
The English Admiral commanding at Trincomalee, Ceylon (right), is greeted by Dönitz (left) during the
Emden
’s visit

5b
Dönitz’s cruiser
Emden
in 1934

6
C-in-C
Kriegsmarine, Grossadmiral
Raeder and his
Führer der U-boote, Kapitän zur See
Karl Dönitz

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