Vian in the Jøssingfjord
The Altmark is a Kriegsmarine supply ship (8,116 tons), built in 1938 to support commerce-raiding operations in the Atlantic. From 23 August to 6 December 1939 she accompanied the Graf Spee on her Atlantic cruise, taking aboard the British crews of the 9 merchantmen sunk by Langsdorff — 299 prisoners packed into her holds. After the end of the Graf Spee at Montevideo, the Altmark's captain, , must bring those prisoners back to Germany alone.
Dau chooses a bold route: head up the North Atlantic under a forged Norwegian identity, then run inside Norwegian territorial waters (neutral) to reach Wilhelmshaven. On 14 February 1940 the Altmark is spotted off the Lofotens by a British aircraft. From that moment the Royal Navy knows she is carrying prisoners and is in Norwegian waters. Diplomatic crisis.
The Norwegian authorities (Rear Admiral Carstens-Egeberg) inspect the Altmark at Trondheim on 15 February. The inspection is cursory: Dau claims the holds are empty (in fact 299 prisoners are locked inside). The Norwegian command accepts the declaration and authorises onward passage. Report to the British Admiralty: on 16 February Churchill (First Lord) is informed personally and orders Captain (commanding the aboard HMS Cossack) to intercept the Altmark in Norwegian waters, in violation of neutrality — a major political decision taken on the spot.
Vian must choose how to intervene in the Jøssingfjord, where the Altmark has taken refuge.
Jøssingfjord, February 1940, captain of HMS Cossack: how to free the prisoners sheltered in neutral Norwegian waters?
Vian applies B. On 16 February 1940 at 23:12 HMS Cossack enters the Jøssingfjord (Norwegian territorial waters). Captain Vian comes alongside the Altmark with a party of 30 armed sailors. A brief exchange of fire: 7 German sailors killed, 11 wounded; no British dead (1 wounded). The British search the ship and find the 299 prisoners in the holds — crammed in, filthy but in good health. The famous shout: "The Navy's here!" HMS Cossack sails out at midnight, prisoners aboard. On the morning of 17 February 1940 the 299 British sailors arrive at Leith (Scotland). A triumphal welcome. The incident is a major tactical success. Norway protests weakly. But Hitler draws the strategic conclusions: Norway cannot enforce its own neutrality against the Allies. This accelerates the decision for Weserübung — the German invasion of Denmark and Norway, launched on 9 April 1940. Vian is promoted vice-admiral, commands the Mediterranean and then the Channel in 1944. Carstens-Egeberg is dismissed. Dau leaves the navy.
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