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The ugly side of submarine warfare
If anyone wants to check the terrible price paid by crews of torpedoed ships, just look at this example of a successful attack by U-107 (Gelhaus) against convoy OS-44, 05:30Z / 13 March 1943 which sank four ships:
MARCELLA - Manchester/Freetown - General cargo - 44 lost (no survivors) OPORTO - Liverpool/Sevilla - Sulphate copper and seeds - 43 lost (4 survivors) CLAN ALPINE - Liverpool/Sudan - General cargo - 26 lost (68 survivors) SEMBILANGAN - Liverpool/AlejandrÃa - General cargo - 86 lost (1 survivor) 199 lives taken by one torpedo salvo... |
And their terrible price was much more important than other deaths in the war.
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I don't think that is what the poster was saying.
JCC |
Re: The ugly side of submarine warfare
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Believe me, I think about that every time I fire an eel. Who am I killing? I'm just glad it's only numbers in a computer that are doing the dying...
But while we're at it, think of the terrible price paid by the u-boat crews. Most of them never came back from their last patrol. Imagine being in a crippled boat, grounded 100 feet below crush depth - it's holding together - but just barely. Batteries running out, oxygen running out, destroyers storming around all over the place, and maybe hours to think about what's going to happen to you, and how you're never going to see your family again... At least for the merchantmen, it was quick and sudden and unexpected I imagine. And some had at least a chance to survive. When a u-boat's hull is crushed at 700 feet, no one survives. OK, so history tells us they were the "bad guys", but the truth is, they were patriotic soldiers doing their duty for their country, at the almost certain cost of their own lives. Whether they were right or wrong, I have a tremendous amount of respect for those men. And finally, let's think about the terrible price paid by anyone involved in a war - no matter what side they're on, no matter whether they're actually fighting in it or not. Just think of Dresden, or London, or Hiroshima, or Stalingrad - 100's of thousands killed, and most non-combatants. War sucks, but sadly it seems to be a part of our nature... |
Re: The ugly side of submarine warfare
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"War is not nice."
- Barbara Bush, 1945 |
"It is only fitting that the price of war is so terrible... Else we would grow to like it too much."
-paraphrased from General Robert E. Lee - American Civil War I believe that places like this forum will make going to war more difficult in the future. Here, you speak with people from many nations. You speak with people who at one time or another... may have been an enemy to your own country. Places like this forum often create understanding and tolerance... where there may have been none before. |
You haven't spent a lot of time on general topics have you?? :rotfl:
Just kidding. :-j Nice sentiment. :yep: |
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The ugly side of submarine warfare
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If one of the moderators (Gizzmoe of course!) transfers this post to the General Topic Forum all hell will break loose! I'm sure a few subsimmers would love to sink my boat in real life! :rotfl: |
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You can basically break war down to one simple sentence. "Somebody wants something someone else has" Take any war, and you can see that this sentence works 99.9% of the time. |
Re: The ugly side of submarine warfare
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A relative of mine was shipped to America for the duration of WW2...
She was a child at the time (about 6 i believe) Now, I dont feel sorry for the U-Boat crew for the following reason... The Ship my relative was on was clearly a civilian vessel...women n kids on decks... Now the Germans thiught it fair to (Unsuccessfully luckily) torpedo the ship several times, Said relative still has nightmares about watchin the pedoes headed towards her ship, one did hit, and failed to detonate So, while I know ppl did as they were told (ie boat crew) but One person decided to fire, and I hope he got what he deserved ! |
Submarine warfare is never pretty, regardless of who wages it.
It is sometimes forgotten that what the Germans tried in the Atlantic (annihilate commercial shipping), the Americans successfully did in the Pacific. Not much military personnel on all these ships. |
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