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"The U-Boat War in the Caribbean" Topic


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Tango0106 Aug 2015 10:51 p.m. PST

"The nature of this book is made crystal clear by the title. The author is a retired officer in the Trinidad and Tobago Coast Guard who was led to write this book by the fact that World War II historians have consistently under-emphasized the U-Boat war in the Caribbean in favor of over-emphasizing the U-Boat war in the North Atlantic. He wanted World War II bookshelves to include a full description of German U-Boat activities in the Caribbean along with an account of the expansive build-up of Allied anti-submarine resources in the region. This book successfully does that.

Within the Naval Administrations of the day, both Allied and German, the Caribbean Region took in a great deal more than just the Caribbean Sea. In the Allied view, the Caribbean Theater also included the entire Gulf of Mexico, the Bahamas, and a large slice out of the mid-Atlantic from a line roughly even with Puerto Rico down to the equator. To talk about the Caribbean Region in this sense is to talk about an area more than four times larger than the Caribbean proper. The shipping lanes in this region were vital to the Allies with many of the essential raw materials needed to wage war sailing through them – and well the Germans knew it. The oil that was so vital to the British and American war machines came from wells in Venezuela and was refined on Aruba; the American aircraft industry desperately needed aluminum smelted from bauxite ore that came through the Caribbean from South America; as did the huge quantities of cow hides needed for the vast number of boots and belts being produced for the swelling armies; and much, much more. The 17 U-Boats lost in the Caribbean Region represented only two percent of all German U-Boats lost during the entire war yet by the end of 1942, 36 percent of all shipping lost worldwide was lost in the Caribbean region. Nowhere during the war, land or sea, did Germany enjoy a higher ratio of losses inflicted to losses incurred than in the Caribbean…"
Full review here
ww2db.com/read.php?read_id=410

Amicalement
Armand

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