Abandoned Convoy; The U.S. Merchant Marine in World War II; The Full Story of the Debacle of Convoy P.Q.-17, Told for the First Time!

New York, N.Y. Exposition Press, 1970. First Edition [stated]. Hardcover. 87, [3] pages. Footnotes. DJ has several small tears. Review copy slip laid in. Includes Preface and Acknowledgments. The subject of this book is the most catastrophic convoy loss of World War II. The result of naval intelligence failure, the tragedy is heightened because it could have been prevented. Here, for the first time, is the complete, unvarnished story of ill-fated Convoy P.Q.-17, made up of thirty-eight merchant ships, twenty-five of which, with their cargoes and many of their men, were sunk in the Arctic Ocean and the frigid Barents and White Seas. PQ 17 was the code name for an Allied Arctic convoy during the Second World War. On 27 June 1942, the ships sailed from Hvalfjord, Iceland, for the port of Arkhangelsk in the Soviet Union. The convoy was located by German forces on 1 July, after which it was shadowed continuously and attacked. The First Sea Lord Admiral Dudley Pound, acting on information that German surface units, including the German battleship Tirpitz, were moving to intercept, ordered the covering force built around the Allied battleships HMS Duke of York and the USS Washington away from the convoy and told the convoy to scatter. Due to vacillation by Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (OKW, German armed forces high command), the Tirpitz raid never materialized. The convoy was the first large joint Anglo-American naval operation under British command; in Churchill's view this encouraged a more careful approach to fleet movements.

As the close escort and the covering cruiser forces withdrew westwards to intercept the German raiders, the merchant ships were left without escorts. The merchant ships were attacked by Luftwaffe aircraft and U-boats and of the 35 ships, only eleven reached their destination, delivering 70,000 short tons (64,000 metric tons) of cargo. The convoy disaster demonstrated the difficulty of passing adequate supplies through the Arctic, especially during the summer midnight sun. Convoy PQ 17 lost 24 of its 35 merchant ships during a week of daylight attacks by U-boats and aircraft. The German success was possible through German signals intelligence and cryptological analysis.
Condition: Very good / Good.

Keywords: U.S. Merchant Marine, WW2, Convoy P.Q.-17, Naval Intelligence, Naval Operations, Arctic, Luftwaffe, U-Boats, Arkhangelsk, Dudley Pound

ISBN: 0682470856

[Book #80093]

Price: $125.00