Keynes' Cruisers Volume 2

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North Atlantic December 19, 1942


Forty eight merchant ships pressed on in the waves. The eastern local escorts of short range anti-submarine ships and small patrol craft were now turning back for Scotland. The Mid-Ocean escort group B-7 consisting of three destroyers, HMS Firedrake, HMS Campbeltown and HMS Chesterfield, as well as four corvettes and the raw lead ship of her class, the frigate HMS Bayntun. Overhead a Coastal Command Liberator watched as the escorts achieved their hand-off. The ocean going escorts had finished refueling from their dedicated tanker just minutes before the convoy had arrived and now the corvettes and the sole frigate were taking forward positions while the destroyers hung back slightly to act as a mobile, fast reserve.


Seven hundred miles to the west and just south of the track that the convoy was expected to take, HMS Biter and five sloops were trialing new tactics of being a mobile support group for any of the convoys that were either under attack or at greatly heightened risk of danger. They had just finished covering a slow outbound convoy to Halifax through the air gap without incident and now they were heading back to the northeast at a steady twelve knots.


It looks like the Allies are winning the U-boat war at a slightly faster rate ITTL.
 
It looks like the Allies are winning the U-boat war at a slightly faster rate ITTL.
Yes they seem to be months ahead of OTL. One of my go to pods for an earlier DDay is winning the Battle of the Atlantic earlier. And to do that aircraft like the Liberator needed to be supplied in larger numbers and far earlier to the coastal command maritime patrol forces. Otl they this did not happen beyond barely double figures for the RAF and the USN operates aircraft patrolling everywhere Uboats were not until March 1943. Love that in this TL a dedicated LRMPA the Privateer was being built far earlier.
 
Story 1724
Sardinia December 20, 1942


Smoke hung heavy over the bow. Both turrets shifted from sticking over the port side until the eight barrels were lying horizontal over the deck. Men were scrambling to police the shells from the secondary batteries as soon as they could safely scurry on the deck. Several hundred yards behind the flagship, the accompanying battle cruisers were also beginning to clear their decks.

Richelieu turned into the great waters and away from the swept channel fourteen miles from the coast and sixteen miles from the ruined airfield. Dozens of bombers were wrecked in the first great offensive action of the revitalized French fleet. The three fast capital ships of the Force de Raid along with half a dozen cruisers and a dozen destroyers including an attached American division had shelled Sardinia’s primary bomber base for forty minutes starting just after midnight. A pair of seaplanes had been launched just before the bombardment arrive and they directed the fall of shot until they had to turn back to Tunisia to recover in sheltered water where searchlights would ease the challenge of landing.

Twenty one ships soon turned to the southwest and accelerated to twenty six knots so that they would be under thick Allied fighter cover at dawn.
 
Thats a formidable force to add to the Med, 1 x Richelieu class Battleship and 2 x Dunkirque class battlecruisers along with some pretty decent cruiser is a considerable concentration of power. Hopefully they got their AA guns updated as the early war MN AA fit wasn't anything to write home about and hopefully some Bofors and 20mm got dotted on their hulls.
 
Thats a formidable force to add to the Med, 1 x Richelieu class Battleship and 2 x Dunkirque class battlecruisers along with some pretty decent cruiser is a considerable concentration of power. Hopefully they got their AA guns updated as the early war MN AA fit wasn't anything to write home about and hopefully some Bofors and 20mm got dotted on their hulls.

They all got 3 months in US Navy yards with significant amounts of AA bolted on
 
Yeah that'll keep the Axis aircraft honest, i'm not sure how many surviving warships the Italians have but if the RM wants to come out, they've lost their main advantage they had in a surface engagement. Speed. The refitted Italian battleships were all 26 - 28 knot capable and this allowed them to simply disengage from any QE or R class ships the RN had. With three modern French ships all 28 knot + capable as well as their escort group, that makes things a lot more iffy for the Regina Marina.

I wonder if the French managed to overcome the big problem with their quad turrets though. Whilst each quad mount was in essence a pair of dual mounts all moved together on a common mounting, they fired as pairs. And this lead to some rather nasty shell dispersion issues as the blast of the guns going off could and did interrupt the shell as it was leaving the barrel, making them have a rather wide fall of shot. The USN had this on their triple mounts but developed a little device that caused the guns to have a very very short delay (you're talking less than a second) between each gun firing, this greatly reduced the shell dispersion issues. The French actually put this same interruptor onto the Jean Bart post war.

Also it helps that these are the waters the MN ships are built for, the French Destroyers were VERY short legged, to the point that it was a bit iffy for atlantic crossings at a decent speed. But here, in the Med, thats what they were built for.
 
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Story 1725
South China Sea, December 20, 1942

“Good eyes Montague” The skipper whispered to the nineteen year old sailor who had seen a bump on the horizon minutes before anyone else saw the approaching danger. USS Gay Corsair’s engines were off and the wooden cargo boat was now drifting. No man stood up, any movement was on hands and knees to shrink the silhouette of the converted cargo ship. The smoking lamp had been out all night so a few men were chewing tobacco and spitting over the side to deal with the stress.

They waited. Eyes focused on the Japanese minesweeper that was lazily patrolling against blockade runners and surfaced submarines attempting to land commandos or drop off supplies to guerrillas behind the front lines. The Japanese crew was tired and bored as this was a run that they had been making for months with little action and ever increasingly uncomfortable conditions on land as they were near the bottom of the supply priority list of a navy that was having trouble shipping the tens of thousands of items a fighting fleet needed. An engine was out of balance and rations were bland and boring, more so than usual as almost everything was locally requisitioned. None of the men aboard the minesweeper dared to be obviously lax but few were on the ball as the minesweeper’s second officer held the deck on the overnight watch.

The patrol boat puttered along at a steady, efficienct twelve knots. For over an hour, the American blockade runner was silent and still in the waves. One of the engineers was busy muttering incantations to keep the clouds covering the almost full moon. Either luck or the spells worked as the minesweeper never came closer than 10,000 yards. A sharp eyed look-out with good light probably may have seen the crazily painted boat, but neither condition was met. The radium painted watch ticked past the hour, the skipper raised his head and stood up. He ordered sandwiches to be passed around and for his engines to come back to life. A few minutes later, the blockade runner was back up to twenty four knots. Three more hours to the destination. Four more hours until the morning twilight and five more hours until any Japanese pilot had a possibility of taking off and seeing the boat.

Four of the crew held look-out positions. They rotated every half an hour to stay fresh and alert. No lights were on as full black-out was maintained above decks to keep both their eyes adjusted and the enemy unprompted. The heavy cargo allowed the boat to go through instead of over the waves and progress was smooth and fast as the smuggler penetrated the inner patrol line without difficulty. Eight thousand yards from the small fishing village on the west coast of the siege camp, breakers were heard. The skipper ordered his engines to slow to sixteen knots and a hurricane lamp to be brought to the bow. Four minutes later, the impromptu signalman flashed the morse recognition signal. Thirty seconds after that, a bright light flashed back. The countersign was correct.

As the blockade runner pulled into the small creek at a walking pace, a flurry of activity was about to commence. The boat pulled in slowly to the wooden dock. Hawsers were flung across the deck and bights bit into the manila fibers, holding the cargo ship tight. The skipper shut down the engines and within a minute leaped off the deck of his command and onto the dock where he stood tall and gave a parade ground salute to a Navy Commander in a battered set of clothes that once was a working uniform.

“Lt. Kennedy reporting as order sir”

“At ease… how was the voyage? Any trouble?” The senior officer lazily returned the salute. He had far more important things to use his energy on.

“We ran into a minesweeper on patrol 70 miles out, just after we split with Gay Viking. It never saw us. Beyond that, fairly dull. “

“Very well, you and your men are gladly welcomed; sight for sore eyes to see a supply ship come in. Let’s unload and figure out what we’re doing wrong for the next time”

Even as the two officers were speaking, nets were being flung over the ship and mobile camouflage was being made ready to hide the boat. Six Ford trucks were lined up along with dozens of ox carts. A hundred men were ready to move the food to the depots. Hard work today for their daily bread, but it would be worth it.
 
Yeah that'll keep the Axis aircraft honest, i'm not sure how many surviving warships the Italians have but if the RM wants to come out, they've lost their main advantage they had in a surface engagement. Speed. The refitted Italian battleships were all 26 - 28 knot capable and this allowed them to simply disengage from any QE or R class ships the RN had. With three modern French ships all 28 knot + capable as well as their escort group, that makes things a lot more iffy for the Regina Marina.

I wonder if the French managed to overcome the big problem with their quad turrets though. Whilst each quad mount was in essence a pair of dual mounts all moved together on a common mounting, they fired as pairs. And this lead to some rather nasty shell dispersion issues as the blast of the guns going off could and did interrupt the shell as it was leaving the barrel, making them have a rather wide fall of shot. The USN had this on their triple mounts but developed a little device that caused the guns to have a very very short delay (you're talking less than a second) between each gun firing, this greatly reduced the shell dispersion issues. The French actually put this same interruptor onto the Jean Bart post war.

Also it helps that these are the waters the MN ships are built for, the French Destroyers were VERY short legged, to the point that it was a bit iffy for atlantic crossings at a decent speed. But here, in the Med, thats what they were built for.

The RM has Littorio and a decent light cruiser force and that is it at this time. Effectively the destruction of the RM at Taranto, Matapan and Corsica have put the scare into the captains and admirals where leaving port or at least leaving sight of land is not desired. Lighter units have been fighting their way to get whatever supplies that they can to the Axis armies on Cape Bon as well as evacuate critical personnel but by now the USN and RN destroyer squadrons have been exacting a very heavy toll on those operations.
 
Force de Raid would be interesting to use in the Gulf of Thailand if they were able to be backed up by enough aircraft.
It's overkill there --- the heavy ships are too big as the decisive battles would be in the South China Sea and the lighter ships are probably just about right with the heavy destroyers being able to get into the knife fighting war of supply, escort and convoy ambush.
 
The RM has Littorio and a decent light cruiser force and that is it at this time. Effectively the destruction of the RM at Taranto, Matapan and Corsica have put the scare into the captains and admirals where leaving port or at least leaving sight of land is not desired. Lighter units have been fighting their way to get whatever supplies that they can to the Axis armies on Cape Bon as well as evacuate critical personnel but by now the USN and RN destroyer squadrons have been exacting a very heavy toll on those operations.

What happened at Corsica?
 
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