Iceland review - 2019, Side 91

Iceland review - 2019, Side 91
87 Iceland Review Hotel Marina I C E L A N D I C R E S T A U R A N T & B A R T a b l e R e s e r v a t i o n s : + 3 5 4 5 1 7 1 8 0 0 - f o r r e t t a b a r i n n . i s Tasty local cuisine by the old harbour Nýlendugata 14, 101 Reykjavik In all the chaos of the Second World War, Iceland’s role in the Battle of the Atlantic may be among the least appreciated. Enduring six years, it was the longest and deadliest of all of World War II’s battles. Some 3,500 Allied merchant ships were sunk along with 175 warships, with a staggering loss of 72,000 Allied sailors. However, the Nazi’s bloody achievement was not without tremendous cost to them as well: of the 1,200 U-boats built throughout the war, 783 were sunk with a loss of 30,000 Kriegsmarine sailors. These ludicrous 75% death rates made the job of the Atlantic sailor, whether Allied or Axis, the most dangerous in the entire war. An island surrounded Eighty years after Britain and France’s declaration of war on Nazi Germany following the invasion of Poland, the amount of doubt and cynicism that had hung in the air at the time is generally ignored or forgotten. But Europeans were terrified. The Soviets had made a peace treaty with the belligerent Germans, leaving the Allies with no way to check the Nazi eastern expansion. After a relatively non-eventful winter of 1939-40, on April 9, 1940 the Nazi Wehrmacht overran Denmark in a matter of hours and the very next day took the British and French completely by surprise with a success- ful invasion of Norway, quickly forcing the Allies to retreat from their defensive positions and evacuate the country. Within three weeks, the Wehrmacht invaded Holland and Belgium, and conquered Luxembourg. By mid-summer, Britain’s most important ally France had surrendered to Hitler’s regime and Churchill’s Britain stood alone. Defeat at the hands of the German armed forces in France wiped away any British hopes for stop- ping Hitler on mainland Europe. The remaining British troops beat a hasty retreat at Dunkirk, abandoning hundreds of aircraft, tanks, and other vital armaments. Kriegsmarine warships sank Britain’s biggest aircraft carrier and several other battleships, shaking Britain’s leaders’ faith in the Royal Navy. From late summer 1940, with Norwegian and main- land European ports under Nazi control, U-boats could surround Britain, torpedoing merchant ships critical for British food and fuel. The Luftwaffe outnumbered the Royal Air Force and began to press its advantage with deadly air raids on London and military targets day after day. In a dark mood, Winston Churchill told a close advisor, “You and I will be dead in three months’ time.” Thankfully, the venerable Prime Minister kept his private cynicism mostly to himself and delivered successive rousing, defiant speeches that were elemen- tal to maintaining British morale, such as his famous address to Parliament in May 1940: “I have nothing to offer you except blood, sweat and tears...” Unexpected guests Shortly after 3.00am on Friday morning, May 10, 1940, over a calm twilight sky above Reykjavík, a lone sin- gle-engine amphibious aircraft droned noisily, catching the attention of a few wakeful Icelanders. The British pilot was on the lookout for U-boat activity in Faxaflói bay that might imperil Britain’s fleet of warships; but he had inadvertently flown directly over the city, waking the startled residents for whom aircraft were a rarity. The Chief of Police was informed of the incursion and arrived at the city’s harbour to the imposing sight of a hulking warship from which hundreds of armed soldiers were disembarking while six other battleships approached menacingly. At first no one was even sure what nation had just invaded. When the Second World War had begun some nine months earlier, Iceland had wasted no time in declar- ing neutrality, feeling an ocean away from the growing hostilities. In the first four months of the war, German U-boats sank 114 Allied merchant ships, but Icelanders maintained the hope that as long as they flew the Icelandic flag their ships would be spared. At first, this strategy to ward off U-boat attacks was successful, but “Whoever has Iceland controls the entrances into and exits from the Atlantic.” — Unidentified German Kriegsmarine Naval Officer
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