Fantasque Time Line (France Fights On) - English Translation

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718
  • August 22nd, 1940

    Versailles
    - A series of decree-laws decides to ban political parties and organizations whose representatives are currently outside of Metropolitan France (the Communist Party is not mentioned: the fact that it had already been banned by the Republic means the GPEF avoids from interfering with the Germans in their relations with the Soviet Union).
    The unions are dissolved. Courts martial are instituted to judge "traitors to the Fatherland and exiled fugitives."
    The administration is to be scrutinized by commissions created for this purpose. This vast operation of "national cleansing" of the administration aims at eliminating the Jews, the Freemasons (or supposedly such) and, more broadly, personalities who are too republican and hold important positions.
    Just return of things: Alexandre Rauzy, SFIO deputy of Ariège and having flirted with the brown ideology before the war, freshly demobilized and having been quick to facilitate exchanges between Abetz and Laval in the previous weeks, is laid off! He is indeed a Freemason (by opportunism no doubt). Excluded from the development of this new state that he had helped to bring into being, he would thus avoid big trouble a few years later... But for the time being, he is chewing on his disappointment!
     
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    719
  • August 22nd, 1940

    A Franco-British squadron leaves Alexandria and heads west for Operation Judgment, under the authority of Admiral Cunningham. For the first time in history, the main attack force is composed of aircraft carriers: HMS Illustrious and Eagle and MN Béarn, under the command of Rear Admiral Lyster.
    "An officer of the Mediterranean Fleet, Lyster had already recommended a raid on the Italian naval base of Taranto during the Abyssinian crisis in 1935. He was now in a good position to put his ideas into practice, with what was at the time the largest concentration of naval air power ever assembled under Allied command:
    - HMS Illustrious: Sqn 806, with 15 Fulmar I, Sqn 815 with 9 Swordfish, Sqn 819 with 9 Swordfish.
    - HMS Eagle : Sqn 813 with 4 Sea-Gladiators and 3 Swordfish and Sqn 824 with 9 Swordfish, plus two French squadrons: AC5 with 6 B-339 and AB4 with 10 SBC-4.
    - MN Béarn: squadrons AC3 with 10 B-339, AC4 with 10 B-339, AB1 with 10 SBC-4 and AB2 with 10 SBC-4.
    Admiral Lyster had thus concentrated under his command 60 attack aircraft (30 Fairey Swordfish torpedo boats and 30 Curtiss SBC-4 dive bombers) and 45 fighters (including 41 modern Fairey Fulmars and Brewster B-339s, and 4 old Gloster Sea-Gladiators, of low combat value and short range).
    The Fleet Air Arm was short of modern aircraft (the 15 Fulmars of the Illustrious were at that time the only modern British fighters available in the Mediterranean theater), but this lack was compensated by the contribution of the Aéronavale, thanks to its Curtiss SBC-4 dive bombers and Brewster B-339 fighters (which arrived from the United States in June, on the Normandie)... and thanks to their pilots." (Jack Bailey, A Great Blue Graveyard - The Naval Air Battle of the Mediterranean, New York, 1955).
     
    720
  • August 22nd, 1940

    Sicily
    - On an auxiliary ground near Comiso, which for the moment had escaped the allied air reconaissance,15 Ju 87B2 Stukas of the 96th Gruppo Tuffatori (Dive Bombing Group), commanded by Maggiore Ercolano Ercolani land. These planes are much less efficient than the Ju 87D that the Luftwaffe started to put on line, but the Italians have to make do with them. They are quickly nicknamed Picchiatelli (crazy) in the Regia Aeronautica.
     
    721
  • August 22nd, 1940

    Bari
    - Operation C 14 being completed, the Regia Aeronautica recovers the fighter units that it had deployed as reinforcements to cover the exit of the fleet and the return of the convoy. What remains to defend Taranto is the 2nd Autonomous Fighter Group, based in Grottaglie. Equipped until then with Fiat CR.32s, it is being re-equipped with Fiat G.50s.
     
    722
  • August 22nd, 1940

    Rhodes
    - On the night of August 21st-22nd, three SM.82s land at Gadurrà airfield, bringing two Fiat CR.32s with spare parts and various supplies and spare parts.
    The following day, five Breda 88s land at the Maritsa airfield. The 7th Autonomous Combat Group gets rid of almost all its "heavy fighters", but the crews come from the 19th Group, which was recalled from Sardinia after it was decommissioned on July 9th. Indeed, after the 96th Gruppo Tuffatori, the pilots of the two Groups formerly equipped with Breda were sent to Graz, in Ostmark (formerly Austria), to be trained to use the Stukas that Hitler agreed to give to his Italian ally. As there were fewer places than applicants, some of those who did not pass the test were volunteers for the Dodecanese.
    The losses of the 17th are thus compensated, but not more.
     
    723
  • August 22nd, 1940

    Libya
    - The allied pincer closes in on what remains of the ASI.
    On the western front, the Italian units occupying Sirte retreat eastwards along the coastal road.
    This makes everything along it an excellent target for constant air attacks and naval bombardments - but there is no other way.
    On the eastern front, the French mobile columns advance from Mechili towards Msus, while the British of the 7th Armoured Division, further south, move towards Antelat and Agedabia. Coming from Tobruk, the 191st ID (fresh troops, arrived on August 12th from Lebanon in Egypt) reaches Mechili, while the 16th British Brigade, followed by the 4th Indian Division marches on Derna along the Via Balbia.
     
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    724
  • August 23rd, 1940

    Aden
    - The light cruiser HMAS Hobart sails with the 2nd Battalion of the Black Watch. This battalion has to disembark in Djibouti and then go to Zeïla, the last part of Somaliland held by the Allies. The 1/2th and 3/15th Punjab will remain in Aden and on the island of Perim, to avoid any unpleasant surprises from the Italians. The battalions that came from East Africa will leave in a few weeks.
     
    725
  • August 23rd, 1940

    London, HQ of the Dutch government-in-exile
    - The defeatist attitude of the Dutch Minister-President Dirk Jan de Geer is becoming increasingly difficult for Queen Wilhelmina. It goes against her own interventions and those of the other members of her government in exile on "Radio Oranje" (since July 28th, this radio helps to support the morale of the Dutch under occupation). Moreover, the population of the Netherlands seems far from following de Geer, as shown by the Carnation Day (June 29th) and, on July 25th, the publication of the first issue of the clandestine newspaper Pieter't Hoen.
    Certainly, on August 20th, the Dutch government decided that the organization and deployment of the Dutch forces in England would be done under British command, officially anchoring the Netherlands in the Allied camp. But De Geer's behaviour remains very embarrassing.
     
    726
  • August 23rd, 1940

    Libya
    - On the Cyrenaican coast, units of the Catanzaro division, to which Graziani has ordered to hold, deploy in Derna. But the city is attacked both from the south (Mechili) by the French 191st ID, and from the east (Gazala) by the British and the Indians, while it is bombed by the allied aviation. General Giuseppe Stefanelli, disobeying orders, decides to withdraw towards the Djebel el Akhdar.
     
    727
  • August 24th, 1940

    Mogadiscio
    - An attack by four Fairey Battles from Sqn 11 (SAAF) sets fire to a fuel depot and warehouses.
     
    728
  • August 24th, 1940

    London, HQ of the Dutch government-in-exile
    - The Queen finally takes the decision - on the verge of constitutionality - to dismiss the Minister-President. She charges the Minister of Justice Pieter Sjoers Gerbrandy of forming a new government. This will be done on September 3rd.
     
    729
  • August 24th, 1940

    Paris, 20:00
    - The Vel'd'Hiv' is far from being full. Visibly, the Parisians prefer to stay at home, in front of their radios, to watch for news of the attack of Taranto, which Algiers
    and London announced shortly after midday and that Rome recognized with reluctance towards 18:00.
    The two duettists in head of poster of the program of the evening make however tons of it to attract attention: Marcel Déat and Jacques Doriot announce the creation of the Parti du Renouveau Français, the PRF. Doriot, thanks to the militants of his PPF, thinks he will take control of the new party, while Déat hopes to take advantage of the opportunity to overturn the balance of political forces to his advantage.
    Both compete in eloquence against those that Doriot calls "the Emigrants", comparing Algiers to Coblence and repeating that one does not take the Fatherland with the sole of his shoes! Déat has the participants boo the participation of the French forces in the operation Judgment:
    "The men of Algiers, the men of yesterday, the men of the Ancien Régime, have gone so far as to prostitute our sailors and airmen, to the point of selling them to the British in order to do the dirty work against the Italian fleet, of which the Royal Navy was incapable! How much did John Bull pay you, gentlemen of Algiers, to put at his disposal a little more French blood?
    Wasn't Mr. Churchill satiated by the blood shed by our unfortunate soldiers on all the battlefields of France for the benefit of the bankers of London? My friends! These merchants of human flesh must be put out of action! Against the enemies of the New France and the New Order, I call for a redemptive St. Bartholomew!"
     
    730 - Start of Operation Judgement / Start of the Attack on Taranto
  • August 24th, 1940

    Ionian Sea
    - The Franco-British aircraft carrier squadron commanded by Rear Admiral Lyster approaches southern Italy without being detected. Admiral Lyster approaches southern Italy without being detected. It is to open a chapter in the history of naval warfare.
    04:50 - The first wave of Operation Judgment is launched: 17 Swordfish of the Illustrious, each armed with an 18-inch torpedo (the eighteenth, due to an engine problem, will take off with the second wave), 19 SBC-4s from the Béarn and an escort of 6 Fulmars from Sqn 806 and 10 B-339 from AC3 squadron. The Swordfish take off first because of their much lower cruising speed. The French dive bombers of the first wave all carry a 450 kg type L armor-piercing naval bomb.
    "Lyster accepted the calculated risk of a dawn attack and not a night strike to maximize the effect of the dive bombing and because he could provide escort for his attack aircraft while keeping an air cover for the fleet. He kept 19 fighters (9 Fulmars from Sqn 806 of the Illustrious, 6 of the 10 B-339s of the AC4 squadron) to defend the AC4 squadron of the Béarn and the 4 Sea-Gladiators of the Eagle). However, the real risk is less than one could have imagined at first sight. Indeed, the Italian air force was intensively engaged (and badly beaten) in Libya, as well as over Sicily and Sardinia. The forces available for the defense of Taranto are limited. And operation Punishment will further hamper the defenders." (J. Bailey, op. cit.).
     
    731
  • August 24th, 1940

    Malta, 05:05
    - Operation Punishment starts at the same time as Judgment. Twenty-five Martin 167s from I/63 and II/63 groups take off, accompanied by 12 machines from B3 and B4 squadrons of the French Naval Aviation as an improvised escort. The 37 aircraft set course for the Regia Aeronautica base of Grottaglie, in charge of the protection of Taranto.
     
    732
  • August 24th, 1940

    Taranto, 05:40
    - The second wave is launched, with 10 Swordfish (the 9 from Sqn 824 of the Eagle and the Illustrious' latecomer, the 3 Swordfish of Sqn 813 of the Eagle remaining on ASM patrol), the 10 SBC-4 of the AB4 squadron and an escort of 9 B-339 (5 from AC5 and 4 from AC4). The Swordfish of the Eagle carry 500 lbs bombs and each SBC-4 a 500 kg GP bomb.
    Midshipman Yvon Lagadec pilots one of the B-339s of AC4 covering the second wave:
    "Like my buddies, no doubt, but pretending, like them, to be perfectly calm, I had a dry throat and sweaty hands. It was going to be my first real combat mission, I mean a mission where I was going to see the enemy up close and certainly face to face, as we hardly ever did on the ground anymore, and as we hardly do today in the air either, at the controls of a supersonic missile-firing machine. Moreover, this first combat was going to be of a new kind, which we had not expected (and neither did the Italians, fortunately for us!). I wonder if Cunningham and Lyster were aware that they were writing a new page in the history of war at sea? Not me, anyway. We took off in the gray light of the early morning, which was conducive to anxiety, but soon enough, the concerns of the moment prevailed over over the parasitic reflections."
    (Au-dessus des Sept Mers - Souvenirs d'un Marin du Ciel, by Rear Admiral Yvon Lagadec, Editions France-Empire).
     
    733
  • August 24th, 1940

    Grottaglia, 06:32
    - The Martin 167s from Malta arrive over the airfield of the 2nd Autonomous Fighter Group airfield, taken by surprise. Only two Fiat G.50s manage to take off in time. One is shot down by the Martin escorts; the second, damaged, leads to the loss of a GB II/63 aircraft by deliberately hitting it. The bombing is far from annihilating the
    Group (two other Fiat G.50 and two CR.32 are destroyed, two G.50 and five CR.32 are damaged), but the desired goal is achieved: the damage caused to the runways and the confusion created will strongly hinder the intervention of the surviving fighters.
     
    734
  • August 24th, 1940

    Taranto, 06:41
    - When the planes of the first wave arrive over Taranto, the Italian defenders are deceived by the fact that many of them (the Swordfish and the SBC-4) are biplanes, looking (from a distance) like Fiat fighters. The anti-aircraft guns remain silent at first and only really start to open fire after the attack has started.
    Due to communication problems between the French bombers and the British torpedo bombers, the planned attack plan (the bombers were to strike first) is only implemented in a certain confusion, all the planes attacking more or less simultaneously. However, this does not have any consequences: it is a beautiful morning and the Italian ships are clearly visible, with the battleships in the "Mare Grande" of Taranto and the cruisers in the "Mare Piccolo". No Italian fighter being in sight, the Fulmar dive to strafe the nearby hydrobase, the B-339 remaining in cover.
    The battleship Littorio attracts a large part of the shots of the first wave. It is soon hit by three torpedoes (two of them on the front part of the hull) and three bombs, before it could really make use of its impressive anti-aircraft weaponry. The ship sinks by the bow, with water rising up to the base of the A turret, fires ravaging the middle of the ship. The Caio Duilio also receives three torpedoes, but does not digest them as well. This old battleship is much less robust than its young companion and the ship capsizes at 07:02. However, an even more spectacular result is obtained against the Conte di Cavour. Already hit by two torpedoes, it is hit by two armour-piercing bombs, one of which pierces the armored deck and explodes in the main forward ammunition bay. The huge ball of fire is even seen from the city of Taranto and a big cloud of black smoke starts to rise over the unfortunate Cavour.
    The allied planes then turn their attention towards the Mare Piccolo and the heavy cruiser Fiume soon receives a bomb in the engine room. Shortly afterwards, a torpedo hits the stern and the cruiser sinks , its hull resting on the bottom of the basin. The brand new light cruiser Duca Degli Abruzzi also receives a torpedo that explodes between the forward turrets.
    The planes of the first wave, having exhausted their ammunition, begin to withdraw, while the anti-aircraft fire becomes more intense, if not more effective. Two Swordfish are lost; one dove into the sea off Taranto, but its crew can be recovered by a Walrus launched from a cruiser and which was patrolling the area precisely for this purpose. An SBC-4 is seen falling, probably damaged by the explosion of the Cavour. Two other dive bombers are damaged, but manage to return to their carriers.
    07:26 - The second wave arrives over Taranto. The French dive-bombers concentrate on the cruisers while the Swordfish, armed with bombs, attack the harbour port facilities and fuel depots. The Fiume is narrowly missed by two bombs (GP model 1930), which aggravate the damage to its hull and so severely damaged the destroyer Aquilone, anchored near the cruiser, that it capsizes shortly afterwards. The Duca degli Abruzzi is hit by two 500 kg bombs; one disabled her rudder, the other explodes the gasoline in the cruiser's seaplane, starting a violent fire.
    The destroyer Borea, which survived the combat of August 20th, is hit by a 500 kg bomb which causes the ammunition to explode, destroying the rear part of the ship. Following the example of the Swordfish, the SBC-4s also attack the harbour installations and the uel depots.
    07h32 - Three Fiat G.50 finally appear, followed four minutes later by five CR.32. The Italian fighters are victims of the chronic communication problems between the Italian Navy and Air Force, aggravated by the attack on the Grottaglie airfield.
    Yvon Lagadec (op. cit.): "A radiant sun offered us a magnificent view of the Italian coast and the port of Taranto, although a veil of smoke from a large sinking ship partially masked it. Farther on, another large ship was lying down lamentably, with its keel in the air. Obviously, the first wave had done a good job.
    But, from our point of view, the hunters, it had had the good idea of waking up the Italian fighters, of which half a dozen representatives appeared on the scene five or ten minutes after our arrival, while the escorts of the first wave had nothing to put under their teeth. They were Fiat CR.32s and G.50s. Our B-339s were not not great beasts of the sky. But against the Fiat, we were competitive!
    I have a hazy memory of the fight. I knew I had to follow my leader, so I followed him: dive, right, left... until I discovered that our maneuvers had brought me right behind an Italian. I forgot about the leader and I only thought of keeping my aim centered on the spotted fuselage of my prey, while angrily pulling the trigger of my machine guns. At one point, I must have heard someone shouting a warning, but I didn't pay attention, because that Italian bastard was zigzagging like a madman! Finally, I saw flames shooting up and devouring the black and white badge of the pilot's silhouette detached from his plane and his parachute opened. I shouted "Yippee", like in a western movie. It was only then that I realized that I was over the sea, with Taranto far behind me, that there was no one else in the sky, and that the burning smell I smelled was not coming from the Italian, who had already
    dove into the Mediterranean, but from my engine."
    The air battle sees two CR.32s and a G.50 fall. A French fighter, damaged, lands in the sea off Taranto. Its pilot, Midshipman Lagadec, is recovered by a Walrus.
    While returning to the fleet, the Swordfish of the Eagle are attacked by three Breda 65, but these are in their turn chased by SBC-4 of the AB4 squadron (what a feast for the pilots of these bombers!). One Breda is destroyed and another damaged.
    The Italian anti-aircraft guns are more effective than the fighters. A Swordfish and an SBC-4 of the second wave are shot down.
    The Regia Aeronautica does its best to find the attackers but, guided by the Illustrious' 79z radar, Fulmar and B-339 destroy three Cant Z501 seaplanes and two SM.79 before they can even see the fleet.
     
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    735 - End of Operations Judgement, Operation Punishment, End of the Raid on Taranto
  • August 24th, 1940

    Taranto, 09:30
    - A Bloch 174 of fast reconnaissance of the GR II/33 takes pictures of the results of the raid. Its pilot, aviator and novelist Antoine de Saint-Exupéry (who enlisted when he was well over the age limit), later described how he flew towards "an enormous cloud of black dirt, rising on the horizon as if a new volcano had been born at the very tip of the Italian boot" [1]. This smoke comes from the Conte di Cavour, which is still burning after the explosion of its ammunition hold, and from burned fuel depots. Saint-Exupéry dares to descend to 1,500 meters in order to take better photos, his plane easily avoiding the Italian fighters thanks to its speed.
    Malta, 12:00 - After examination of the images and debriefing of the crew of the Bloch 174, it is decided to proceed with operation Punishment.
    Malta, 14:10 - The GB I/23, II/23 and II/31 take off 36 LeO-451.
    Taranto, 15:45 - Flying at 6 000 m and 500 km/h, the French bombers are completely out of reach of the Italian fighters. The port installations and the military warehouses
    are again seriously hit by this unopposed raid and left in flames.
    While bombing, the French airmen can notice that many Italian ships are leaving the port of Taranto. Fearing a repeat of the attack of the morning, Admiral Campioni obtained from Admiral Cavagnari the authorization to withdraw to the Adriatic bases all the ships in a condition to exit the port. The battleships Vittorio Veneto and Giulio Cesare, three heavy cruisers and seven light cruisers, duly escorted, withdraw in a hurry, leaving only light units on the spot: some destroyers and torpedo boats, the submarines...

    "The list of damages inflicted on the Italian fleet by a reduced number of old planes is impressive.
    Battleships (in the Mare Grande):
    Littorio, hit by three torpedoes and three 450 kg armor-piercing bombs. Serious damage. Sent to Genoa for repairs. Could be operational in early 1942.
    Caio Duilio, hit by three torpedoes. Sunk.
    Conte di Cavour, hit by two torpedoes and two 450 kg armour-piercing bombs. Sunk.
    Cruisers (in the Mare Piccolo):
    CA Fiume, hit by a torpedo near the stern and a 450 kg bomb in the engine room (and narrowly missed by two other bombs). Sank to the bottom of the basin. Refloated and sent to Trieste for repairs. Could be operational in early 1942.
    CL Duca degli Abruzzi, hit by a torpedo between the A and B turrets, and by two bombs, one in the catapult area, the other in the stern. Severely damaged. Towed to Trieste for repairs, scheduled for completion in October 1941.
    Destroyers (in the Mare Piccolo):
    DD Aquilone, put out of action by a 450 kg bomb that missed it by a small margin (it was one of those that grazed the Fiume). Capsized.
    DD Borea, hit by a bomb that exploded his ammunition. Irreparable.
    The Operation Judgement/Punishment was considered a major strategic success. The Italian Navy had been decapitated and its ability to support the troops in Africa had been wiped out in one fell swoop. Politically, "Judgment" also marked a very important point. It demonstrated both the willingness and the ability of the Allied forces to take the strategic initiative in the Mediterranean, which was observed with attention by countries such as Spain, Greece, Yugoslavia and Turkey. Finally, this new Italian defeat was also a welcome balm for the morale of the population of occupied France." (J. Bailey, op. cit.).

    To say that Mussolini was shocked when he heard the news and discovered that the Allied fleet was able to withdraw without casualties would be an understatement. Two days later, the Grand Council of the Fascist Party had a particularly stormy meeting and the King appointed Marshal Badoglio as head of a Special Commission of Inquiry.
    But among the personalities most deeply impressed by Operation Judgment, the Japanese naval attaché in Rome, who visited Taranto on August 30th, and took many notes.

    The last word on "Judgment" could be left to an FAA officer, Huguenot of origin... Let's tell Yvon Lagadec's story: "Fished out of the water by a Walrus, I found myself on the Eagle. In the evening, at the debriefing, I was still in a state of shock. At 21 years old, I had had my first fight, my first victory, I had been shot down, but I was still alive and free. So, when the English officer who "debriefed" me, a man named Rochelle, delighted as we all were, remarked, "Wasn't it a good day to have pounded so hard the papists this day?"), though a Breton and a Catholic, I did not get angry. After all, August 24th was the anniversary of St. Bartholomew's Day, and since the Pope was Italian, too bad for him."
    The next day, Lagadec has another reason to rejoice: informed of his heroic death during his first battle, but not of his rescue, his superiors appointed him Ensign Second Class Ensign posthumously. And when he resurrects, they don't have the heart to "de-rank" him - after all, he had shot down an enemy aircraft! He will later have the opportunity to earn his rank...

    [1] Orphelins du Ciel, from which this sentence is taken, was published in New York at the end of 1941, during the propaganda tour that Saint-Exupéry made in the United States, while writing The Little Prince.
     
    736
  • August 25th, 1940

    Brindisi
    - The loss of the Morea's cargo on August 14th and the lack of cargo in two of the other five ships in the convoy leads the Regio Esercito to ask Supermarina to organize a new convoy for Albania, in order to take without delay everything that could not reach Ancona in time. The RTSO office takes on this new task by setting up a small convoy that leaves Brindisi for Valona on the night of August 24th-25th.
     
    737
  • August 24th, 1940

    Libya
    - The Africa Settentrionale Italiana shrinks daily.
    In the east, the Indians of the 4th Division enter Derna without difficulty, just ahead of the British of the 16th Brigade.
    In the west, Sirte falls, while the French motorized vanguards from El Machina reach Nofilia. Now mounted on American light armoured vehicles M1 and M2A2, the men of "Leclerc" are in the lead. Their leader has just been appointed lieutenant-colonel by General Blanc (on a discreet recommendation of De Gaulle).
    The submarine Pietro Micca, on its way to Sirte, is diverted to El Agheila.
     
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