Description

A fascinating analysis of the World War II battle between Great Britain and France to ensure French ships were kept out of German hands during World War II.

Following France''s armistice with the Axis powers, Great Britain realized that if Germany or Italy insisted upon the transfer of battleships, cruisers, and destroyers from the French Navy to the control of their own navies, the balance in the Mediterranean would immediately swing in their favour. Churchill decided that the Marine Nationale''s most powerful vessels would need to be secured through diplomacy, coercion, or force. The French Navy commander-in-chief was equally eager to keep their ships out of Axis hands, but he also did not want the British to have them. These increasingly hostile circumstances led to Operation Catapult, which began on 3 July 1940, and saw the two nations battle for the ships.

Expert naval historian Ryan Noppen analyses the Royal Navy Operation Catapult at Mers

Mers elKebir 1940

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Paperback by Ryan K. Noppen

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A fascinating analysis of the World War II battle between Great Britain and France to ensure French ships were kept... Read more

    Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
    Publication Date: 10/24/2024
    ISBN13: 9781472859709, 978-1472859709
    ISBN10: 1472859707

    Non Fiction , Military History , Non Fiction

    Description

    A fascinating analysis of the World War II battle between Great Britain and France to ensure French ships were kept out of German hands during World War II.

    Following France''s armistice with the Axis powers, Great Britain realized that if Germany or Italy insisted upon the transfer of battleships, cruisers, and destroyers from the French Navy to the control of their own navies, the balance in the Mediterranean would immediately swing in their favour. Churchill decided that the Marine Nationale''s most powerful vessels would need to be secured through diplomacy, coercion, or force. The French Navy commander-in-chief was equally eager to keep their ships out of Axis hands, but he also did not want the British to have them. These increasingly hostile circumstances led to Operation Catapult, which began on 3 July 1940, and saw the two nations battle for the ships.

    Expert naval historian Ryan Noppen analyses the Royal Navy Operation Catapult at Mers

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