The Navy Won The Batle Of Britain

LeEnfield

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I read this article in todays Daily Telegraph and I was wondering if any had any comments on it.


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Battle of Britain was won at sea. Discuss
By Thomas Harding

(Filed: 24/08/2006)


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The Battle of Britain was not won by the RAF but by the Royal Navy, military historians have concluded, provoking outrage among the war's surviving fighter pilots.
Challenging the "myth" that Spitfires and Hurricanes held off the German invaders in 1940, the monthly magazine History Today has concluded that it was the might of the Navy that stood between Britain and Nazi occupation.
The view is backed by three leading academics who are senior military historians at the Joint Service Command Staff College teaching the future admirals, generals and air marshals.
They contend that the sheer numbers of destroyers and battleships in the Channel would have obliterated any invasion fleet even if the RAF had lost the Battle of Britain.

The idea that a "handful of heroes saved these islands from invasion" was nothing more than a "perpetuation of a glorious myth," the article suggests.
"Many still prefer to believe that in the course of that summer a few hundred outnumbered young men so outfought a superior enemy as solely to prevent a certain invasion of Britain. Almost none of which is true," reports Brian James, the author.
Dr Andrew Gordon, the head of maritime history at the staff college, said it was "hogwash" to suggest that Germany failed to invade in 1940 "because of what was done by the phenomenally brave and skilled young men of Fighter Command".
"The Germans stayed away because while the Royal Navy existed they had not a hope in hell of capturing these islands. The Navy had ships in sufficient numbers to have overwhelmed any invasion fleet - destroyers' speed alone would have swamped the barges by their wash."
Even if the RAF had been defeated the fleet would still have been able to defeat any invasion because fast ships at sea could easily manoeuvre and "were pretty safe from air attack".
While admitting it was an "extremely sensitive subject", Dr Christina Goulter, the air warfare historian, supported the argument. "While it would be wrong to deny the contribution of Fighter Command, I agree largely that it was the Navy that held the Germans from invading," she said.
"As the German general Jodl put it, so long as the British Navy existed, an invasion would be to send 'my troops into a mincing machine'." Any challenge to the long-held theory that the 2,600 pilots of Fighter Command defeated the might of Germany would be subject to "more than a modicum of hostility", she added.
The Battle of Britain was "a sacrosanct event" for the RAF, like Waterloo for the Army and Trafalgar for the Navy.
It inspired Churchill to say: "Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few."
Although six destroyers were lost during the evacuation of Dunkirk in May 1940 this was due to them being stationary as they picked up troops.
Tackling capital ships would have been an even greater task because at the time the Luftwaffe, unlike the Japanese during the destruction of the fleet at Singapore, did not have armour-piercing bombs, the article says.
It has been argued that German minefields strung across the Dover Straits would have prevented the Home Fleet, based at Scapa Flow, from destroying slow troop barges.
But Dr Gordon disputed this saying that Britain had 52 minesweepers and 16 minesweeping trawlers arrayed against four German minelayers.
The disparity between the navies was huge with Britain having 36 destroyers close by and a similar number two days away. The Navy also had five capital ships on hand, whereas the Kriegsmarine had lost or had damaged their battleships.
"Anyway, in an emergency, the Royal Navy steams straight through minefields as they did when pursuing the Scharnhorst," Dr Gordon said. "They have a drill, following line astern. 'Each ship can sweep one mine' is the rather grim joke."
Can you imagine the RN's targets? An invasion fleet of Rhine barges, moving at about two knots over the water, with a freeboard of a few feet. . . an absolute field day for our navy. So that was the nightmare for the German navy. They knew it just couldn't happen."
Prof Gary Sheffield, the JSCSC's leading land warfare historian, said while some Germans might have got ashore it would have been near impossible for them to be re-supplied with the Navy so close by.
The article also argues that while the RAF had 644 fighters to the Luftwaffe's 725 at the beginning of the battle by October 1940 Britain was far out-producing the enemy.
It also said that after the defeat in France in early 1940 it was vital for Britain to have a victory to reassure the public it was winning the war and the RAF fighter pilots were an obvious choice. "In 1940, the total acceptance of the story's simple broad-brush strokes was very necessary," the historian Richard Overy said.
Dr Gordon added: "The RAF's was a substitute victory - a substitute for the certain victory over Sealion, had the Germans been mad enough to attempt invasion."
 
Well, it seems to me that hindsight by so called experts is often unkind to those who actually participated and lived through the events of history. I am sure that had the RAF not prevailed through their heroic efforts against overwhelming numbers, that the Navy itself would likely have been hard pressed to survive and onslaught by an unchallenged Luftwaffe. I wouldn't presume that the war could have been won without the Naval superiority of the British, at the same time I would question the longevity of that superiority had it not been for the victory of the RAF at the Battle of Britain. I wish they'd (historians) give credit where credit is due. There were plenty of heroics to go around. It does no good to cast aspersions on the RAF. Each branch played a vital part in the total victory, wouldn't you say?
 
Now with out air cover the Navy lost the Battleships the Prince Of Wales and the Repulse around Malaya, so with out air cover how were they going to beat of the German Air Force. Also in 1940 most of the ships has only a minimal amount of Ack Ack as they still did not see air craft as that greater threat.
 
Hmmm... while true, I think that they overlooked one extremely important point. The Battle of Britain was won by the RAF, simply because by winning it when they (the RAF) did, the Royal Navy never had to fight it. If you want to win, you have to fight, and the RN never fought the Battle of Britain. A better way to say this is that the first round of the Battle of Britain was won by the RAF, but in the end, it would have been won by the RN in round two had the RAF lost round one. But they did not lose, so it becomes a moot point.

In addition, the German High Command set three conditions for the fighting of the Battle. The first was having air superiority over Britain and over the English Channel, and the second, using that air superiority along with the German Navy to neutralize the RN in the Channel. As they never achieved air superiority, they could never get condition two, so the battle was lost when the Luftwaffe was defeated by... the Royal Air Force. I think Dr Christina Goulter is wrong.

There was a third condition, and that was that the Kreigsmarine had to stop Britain from being resupplied from the US and Canada. It could be argued that the RN did participate in this effort, but IMO, the main fight in the Battle of Britain was in the air. The Battle of the Atlantic had many facets, and defending Britain from Germany was only one of them. In fact, the Battle of the Atlantic was won long after the Battle of Britain was over.

Dean.
 
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This article was also run in the London Times.

The Royal Navy’s main contribution to the ‘Battle of Britain’ was a few months earlier during the Norway campaign. Although this is seen as a British failure it was in fact a proportionate victory for the Royal Navy in which they destroyed or disabled a large number of German ships, some by heroic suicidal actions. Germany was left without an effective fleet during the latter half of 1940 whilst Britain could afford to take their losses.

One of the reasons why it is claimed that the RAF won the Battle of Britain (ignoring the definition) was the subsequent importance of air actions at sea, such as the sinking of the Bismarck and Force Z for example. This implied that ships could not operate effectively without air cover. This assumption is somewhat doubtful however, when smaller ships such as destroyers and motor torpedo boats are concerned which would have been in the forefront of action. The Luftwaffe were wary of coming too close to warships with anti aircraft fire notwithstanding the inadequate fire control system used at that time. Although many British merchant ships were sunk in the Mediterranean and Arctic were the Luftwaffe generally held control of the air, they were unable to stop these convoys. The later American anti-aircraft systems were more than a match for any aircraft the axis forces could deploy against them and this questions the validity of the need for aerial dominance altogether.
 
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perseus said:
This article was also run in the London Times.

Snip...

One of the reasons why it is claimed that the RAF won the Battle of Britain (ignoring the definition) was the subsequent importance of air actions at sea, such as the sinking of the Bismarck and Force Z for example. This implied that ships could not operate effectively without air cover. This assumption is somewhat doubtful however, when smaller ships such as destroyers and motor torpedo boats are concerned which would have been in the forefront of action. The Luftwaffe were wary of coming too close to warships with anti aircraft fire notwithstanding the inadequate fire control system used at that time. Although many British merchant ships were sunk in the Mediterranean and Arctic were the Luftwaffe generally held control of the air, they were unable to stop these convoys. The later American anti-aircraft systems were more than a match for any aircraft the axis forces could deploy against them and this questions the validity of the need for aerial dominance altogether.

OK, imagine that you are commanding the Royal Navy. The RAF has been defeated by some well-planned, brilliantly executed raids, and they have lost air superiority over the English Channel. Reconnaissance clearly shows that the Germans are preparing Operation Sea Lion, but that they are not yet ready. You receive orders to disrupt these preparations in any possible way, while trying to preserve your fleet to fight against the inevitable invasion. Given the capabilities of your fleet and the Luftwaffe, would you send your BBs and cruisers into the channel?
 
Given the capabilities of your fleet and the Luftwaffe, would you send your BBs and cruisers into the channel?

Possibly not until the invasion itself.

I suppose one could risk a naval bombardment of the barges at night with the location indicated by a sub during the day, but only if ordered to.

I think Sandhurst played several wargames of Sealion one scenerio with Luftwaffe superiority, it might be interesting to find information on this version.

Letters from Today radio 4 listeners, and the view of the former 1st sea Lord is here, press listen again and adjust the Podcast below to 1.22 (I think this link is valid for 24hrs)

http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/today/listenagain/
 
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perseus said:
This article was also run in the London Times.

mmm...There is no London Times (well there my be one which is a free rag), but there is The Times. All other Times are imitiations of the original! As you can tell its a bug bear of mine, people calling The Times the London Times.

Back on topic. The Royal Navy had to be a factor, but I always wondered what would have happened to the Navy without air support.

The Navy may have stopped an invasion but at what price? The lose of ships that would have probably resulted could have been fatal for Britains convoy protection requirements.
 
Reiben

Although you are correct, I was just trying to be courtious and clear considering this is an international forum. quote

Outside the UK, The Times is sometimes referred to as "The London Times",[4] or "The Times of London"[5] in order to distinguish it from the many other "Times" papers such as The New York Times and The Times of India. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Times

Regarding the Battle of Britain

The problem with some military theorists is that they like a simplistic view of events, in this case either the RAF or Royal Navy must have stopped the German invasion. The truth is that both contributed to the security of Great Britain before, during and after the official Battle of Britain. Certainly continuing the struggle would certainly have been far more difficult without having both.

However, of the two I believe that the Navy contributed the most, through its earlier exploits destroying or disabling much of the German Navy, and the sheer threat of being able to stop the supply route across the Channel. It was not just a matter of materiel strength, Hitler and his commanders respected the Royal Navy and they knew they would stop at nothing in destroying the transports. The RN had a long tradition of moral superiority with an almost psychopathic zeal.

In contrast, the Germans had far less respect for the RAF even during the Battle of Britain. The RAF ‘few’ were originally composed of amateur ‘Gentlemen’ who although brave and courageous were still learning tactics and had little of the professionalism of the Luftwaffe.

The German combat tactics were greatly superior, being based on the ‘rotte’ (pair) developed in Spain in 1936/7, with each pilot concentrated his search inwards so as to cover his partner’s blind areas behind and below. Two pairs made up the ‘schwarm’ (formation) of four, with the leading pair flying to one side and slightly ahead. The RAF in contrast still flew in neat V patterns which the German pilots dubbed the vics "Idiotenreihen" or rows of idiots.

Some of the more experienced ‘Gentlemen’ flyers communicated poorly to the more ‘common’ new recruits, failing to explain how to use the aircraft guns more effectively by aligning guns at a point and firing close. One is tempted to believe they were more interested in obtaining individual glory than overall success. The success of the RAF was less down to the pilots or the aircraft, but the air defence system, the superior strategy employed by Park and Dowding verses that of Goering and the advantages of flying over home soil.
 
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I have just been watching the programme about Douglas Bader and what exactly brought him down over France (he claimed that a ME109 collided with his tail). It was interesting that the JG26 group using 109s appeared to get the better of the Spitfires in this operation now the fighting was over France. So I decided to check on the statistics regarding the number of planes shot down on either side in this situation.

From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RAF_Fighter_Command

Most of the factors that had allowed Fighter Command to win the Battle of Britain were now reversed. For example, British pilots shot down in 1940 and surviving would be patched up and sent back to their units as quickly as possible. In 1941, over France, a shot down pilot would, likely as not, end up a prisoner of war. The year saw RAF Fighter Command claim some 731 Luftwaffe fighters shot down (although only 236 were lost from all causes) for losses of approximately 530 RAF fighters lost.

This would seem to add strength to the argument that it was factors other than the relative strength of the pilots or aircraft which won the air battle over Britain in 1940.

Incidentally, it now appears that the most likely explanation was that Bader was shot down by one of his own crew after Bader accidentally drifted near a squadron of 109s.
 
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IF Hitler had gone forth with the invasion of Britain and IF the Navy did destroy the German invasion fleet, then I would agree with you, but as it is Hitler cancelled the invasion of Great Britain because the Luftwaffe failed to gain air superiority against the RAF. The Battle of Britain was won in the sky over England, not in the seas of the English Channel.
 
It's just my humble opinion, and I'm probably wrong, but I believe that in any campaign many factors are involved. It's like Chaos Theory (a butterfly flaps its wings over Tokyo and six months later you get rain in New York City instead of sunshine). The RN smashes-up the German Navy in Norway. The Germans plan to use river barges instead of true landing craft. The Germans show initial success in attacking Britain from the air (attacking airfields and other infrastructure). A German bomber group inadvertantly "ditches" its bombs over a blacked-out London. The RAF retaliates with a raid on Berlin. Hitler loses his marbles and switches to attacking cities. The RAF shoots down a bucket-load of bombers. The US starts sending lend-lease four-stacker destroyers to Britain, severely turning the tide in light ships against Hitler. The "Leopards", as Churchill wanted to call The Commandoes, begin messing things up wherever they go.

I guess that what I am trying to say is that all the Brits were heroes, most of the Germans were heroes, and, Hitler had simply run out of marbles to lose. But, I guess that's what you get when you have a paranoid, tantrum-throwing corporal running the show.

That's just my opinion, so I'm probably wrong.
 
Bang On Mate

I could not agree with you more! Hitler was "on camera" suprised at the speed of his victory in France ECT. He simply did not plan for an attack on the UK! (So soon) Russia was and many others believe, was his main target. During the "Phoney war" both sides waited for attack, I think if Hitler had "gone in" to the USSR, the UK and France would not have moved against him. After all no-one then liked Stalin and the would have "negotiated a treaty" before too much blood was shed. In the end though, what matter, we destroyed the beast and all his evil in the world then!

Semper Fi!

:m16shoot:
 
Hitler never wanted a war against England. He kept saying in speeches that "England was not our (Germany's) natural enemy". I'll agree that Hitler was ill prepared to launch an invasion of the UK in June 1940, but he never really wanted to anyway. What he really wanted was for the UK to sign a non-aggression pact and for them to participate in the invasion of the USSR. He thought he could play to Churchill's known anti-Soviet sentiments.

What Hitler didnt realize was while Winston really disliked the Soviets, he disliked the Nazis even more.
 
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