Meanwhile the political stage was in even more turmoil than the land. One political storm was around Albania. None of the major Allies had entered Albania during the war, all recognised it post war, although the US did offer recognition with strings attached. Equally the Albanians were backing anti-Greek communist rebels immediately after the war, while the western Allies especially Britain, supported Greece. Both of these forced the western Allies to have some difficulty dealing with Albania politically, and eventually the Soviets would scoop them up into their sphere of influence.
HMS Orion |
Later that year it was decided to test the issue. The Royal Navy would dispatch a small task force to navigate the channel to see if the Albanians would react to British ships exercising the right of innocent passage. Aircraft were put on standby to help should the incident escalate.
On 22nd of October at 1330, the ships HMS Mauritius (Crown Colony cruiser), HMNZS Leander (Leander cruiser), HMS Saumarez and HMS Volage (both destroyers) left Corfu harbour. The ships were deployed in pairs, with HMS Mauritius and HMS Saumarez leading, then a gap of about 3000 meters and the other two ships. All the ships were at action stations.
About 1445 the ships reached their closest point to the Albanian coast, there wasn't a hint of reaction from the shore and the ships began to move towards the open sea. Eight minutes later there was a massive explosion, just forward of the bridge, smashing a thirty foot hole in the side of HMS Saumarez. The ship's executive officer Teddy Gueritz* led the damage control parties forward, and saved more than a few men, and prevented the ship from sinking. However despite their best efforts thirty men were killed. The explosion had been caused by a mine.
HMS Saumarez after the mine hit |
At this juncture a fast Albanian boat approached the damaged ship and her covering cruiser. Wary of any further attacks from the Albanians source they were turned away briskly. HMS Volage was brought up and took the damaged ship under tow. However as they proceeded at 1616 she too was hit by a mine, which blew her bow off. At this point two further ships were dispatched to assist in recovery operations from Corfu harbour. However HMS Volage running in reverse managed to re-secure the tow line, with the help of a leading signalman who'd had his jaw broken in the first explosion. Both ships entered Corfu harbour, in reverse at about midnight. The second explosion had claimed fourteen more dead, and about 42 were wounded across both ships.
HMS Volage after her mine hit |
The mines were German GY types, freshly painted with grease on their anchor chains and no marine growth. Obviously they were brand new and must have been laid after the channel was first swept after the war. Comparison between fragments of casing recovered from the two damaged destroyers confirmed that these were the same type of weapons that had caused the casualties. As it turns out the Albanians, lacking the facilities to lay their own mines had invited Yugoslavia to lay them for them.
One of the recovered mines |
*Present at the Battle of the River Plate, and was Beachmaster on D-day for Sword Beach. I thought I recognised his name as I wrote this. He was the chap who took command of Marine Burt, who I interviewed a few years back, and included his story in my first book, General War Stories. Its funny how you keep tripping over the same people by accident in history.
Image Credits:
www.naval-history.net
In 1968 while I was still in high school, I lived in Charleston SC. I worked on a shrimp boat that summer. One day I asked the captain what the red marked area on a chart meant, he said it was a WW2 mine field. We did not shrimp in that area.
ReplyDeleteI'm surprised it actually lasted that long.
DeletePicking a nit, the EAM and ELAS were not "anti-Greek communists",
ReplyDeleteThey were the WWII Greek communist and socialist paramilitary resistance to the German and Italian occupation,
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_Civil_War
The sources I drew it from obviously simplified it a bit then.
DeleteYup,
ReplyDeleteJust like the US called the resistance to the occupation of Iraq, anti-Iraqi Forces,
Ditto for Afghanistan,
Sadly, for Greece, starting in 1944, the Royalist Greek Resistance allied with the pro-Facist Greek Collaberationist's, the Italians and German's, to target the much larger, more "consistant" and sucessful Communist and Socialist resistance Organizations,
And the AngloAmerican alliance followed the trend after '45, despite many "truces" which were just "traps" against the Socialists and Communists.
Despite their claims of a "battle against Communism", Stalin had "given" Greece to the West, the Communists and Socialists were very much looking forward to elections in what was, a "feudal" country, and when the shooting started for serious, the only support the EAM and ELAS could muster, was from the Albanians and the Yugoslavs.
Greece could have been an EU "Contender", but 40 years of Feudal dictatorships left it the EU whipping boy.