Soviet submarine Baltic Sea campaign in 1944 | |||||||
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Part of the Baltic Sea campaign of the Eastern Front of World War II | |||||||
preserved conning tower of L-3 | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Germany | Soviet Union | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
Escort units | 15 submarines | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
1 fleet torpedo boat sunk 2 minesweepers sunk 1 patrol boat damaged 9-10 merchants sunk 1 tanker sunk 1 transport sunk 1 dredger sunk 1 tug likely sunk 1 training-ship damaged 4 fishing vessel sunk and 1 damaged | none | ||||||
1 Swedish passenger-ship sunk |
The Soviet submarine Baltic Sea campaign in 1944 was launched by the Soviet Navy to harass enemy shipping and naval military assets of the Nazi Germany on the Eastern Front during World War II.
After the failed offensive of the previous year, Soviets restrained for a further campaign until Finland signed the Moscow Armistice on 9 September 1944, ceasing war with Soviet Union and starting hostilities with Germany (Lapland War). This move, enabled the Soviet Navy to avoid the mine field barrages in the Gulf of Finland that caused heavy losses in 1942 and prevented success in 1943. Submarines ShCh-310, ShCh-318 and ShCh-407 were the first to operate in open Baltic from Finnish harbors and navigating out of the dangerous zones with aid of Finnish naval officers, they were soon followed by other 12 submarines. [1] [2] On 8 September (before the actual offensive), Soviet submarine M-96 sunk by mine in the Narva Bay. It was the only Soviet submarine loss in 1944. [3]
On 6 October, Soviet submarine ShCh-407 torpedoed and sunk German merchant Nordstern (1127 GRT) west of Klaipeda. [4]
On 8 October, Soviet submarine ShCh-310 torpedoed and sunk the German dredger Bagger 3 (400 GRT) and shortly later torpedoed and sunk the German transport ship Ro-24(4499 GRT), west of Ventspils. [5]
On 9 October, Soviet submarine S-13 damaged with gunfire the German fishing vessel Siegfried (563 GRT) north of Danzig Bay. [6]
On 12 October, Soviet submarine S-4 torpedoed and sunk German fishing vessel Taunus (218 GRT) off the Stolpebank. [7]
On 13 October, Soviet submarine S-4 torpedoed and sunk German tanker Terra (1533 GRT) north-east of Leba. [8] On the same day, Soviet submarine Lembit torpedoed and sunk the German merchant Hilma Lau (2414 GRT) north-east of Bornholm. [9]
On 15 October, Soviet submarine Lembit torpedoed and sunk the German auxiliary minesweeper M-3619 Crabeels. [10]
On 10 November, Soviet submarine ShCh-309 torpedoed and sunk German merchant Carl Cords (903 GRT) north-west of Ventspils. [11]
On 21 November, Soviet submarine L-21 after having laid a field of mines, attacked and sunk with torpedo the neutral Swedish passenger-ship Hansa (563 GRT) north-west of Halskuk. [12]
On 28 November, Soviet submarine K-51 sunk with gunfire the German fishing boat Sollind (260 GRT). [13]
On 1 December, Soviet submarine K-51 sunk with gunfire the German fishing boat Saar (235 GRT). [14]
On 4 December, Soviet submarine ShCh-407 torpedoed and sunk German merchant Seeburg (12181 GRT) inside Danzig Bay [15]
On 7 December, Soviet submarine ShCh-309 torpedoed and sunk German merchant Nordenham (4592 GRT)north-west of Uzava. [16]
On 26 December, Soviet submarine K-56 torpedoed and sunk German merchant Baltenland (3038 GRT) off the Polish north coast. [17]
On 29 December, Soviet submarine K-56 torpedoed and sunk Swedish merchant Venersborg (1046 GRT) off Bornholm. [18]
Between October and December 1944, the Soviet Navy employed also the three left submarines (L-3, L-21 and Lembit) capable of minelaying operations in offensive actions, laying 77 mines. [19]
On 11 October, Submarine L-3 laid a field of mines off Cape Arkona. [20] These mines hit the following ships:
On 11 October, Submarine Lembit laid mines off Kolberg. [21] These mines hit the following ships:
Another field laid on 3 December is not known to have scored successes.
On 23 November, Submarine L-21 laid a field of mines off Stolpebank. [22] These mines hit the following ships:
Differently from the past offensives, no Soviet submarine was lost due mine or enemy action while a number of merchants and few German warships were sunk. While successful, the offensive begun too late to seriously interfere with the German naval evacuation of Revel between 18 and 23 September 1944. [1]
German submarine U-30 was a Type VIIA U-boat of Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine that served during World War II. She was ordered in April 1935 in violation of the Treaty of Versailles, which prevented the construction and commissioning of any U-boats for the German navy, and as part of the German naval rearmament program known as Plan Z. She sank the liner SS Athenia (1922) on 3 September 1939, under the command of Fritz-Julius Lemp. She was retired from front-line service in September 1940 after undertaking eight war patrols, having sunk 17 vessels and damaging two others. U-30 then served in a training role until the end of the war when she was scuttled. She was later raised and broken up for scrap in 1948.
EML Lembit is one of two Kalev-class mine-laying submarines built for the Republic of Estonia before World War II, and is now a museum ship in Tallinn. She was launched in 1936 at Vickers-Armstrongs, Barrow-in-Furness, and served in the Estonian Navy and the Soviet Navy. Until she was hauled out on 21 May 2011, Lembit was the oldest submarine still afloat in the world. Her sister ship, Kalev, was sunk in October 1941. Lembit is named for Lembitu, an Estonian ruler who resisted the Livonian Crusades.
German submarine U-214, was a Type VIID mine-laying U-boat of Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine during World War II.
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German submarine U-407 was a Type VIIC U-boat built for Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine during World War II. She was laid down on 12 September 1940 by Danziger Werft, Danzig as yard number 108, launched on 16 August 1941 and commissioned on 18 December 1941 under Oberleutnant zur See Ernst-Ulrich Brüller.
S-7 was a Stalinets-class submarine of the Soviet Navy. Her keel was laid down by Krasnoye Sormovo in Gorkiy on 14 December 1936. She was launched on 5 April 1937 and commissioned on 30 June 1940 in the Baltic Fleet. During World War II, the submarine was under the command of Captain Sergei Prokofievich Lisin and took part in the Soviet submarine Baltic Sea campaign in 1942. S-7 scored victories, but was sunk in action.
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