At All Costs
CONTENTS •••
TITLE PAGE
DEDICATION
MAP
PART I FATE IN THE CONVERGENCE
CHAPTER 1 Malta, Summer of 1942
CHAPTER 2 Fred and Minda
CHAPTER 3 Fire Down Below
CHAPTER 4 To Belfast and Oslo
CHAPTER 5 Lonnie Dales
PART II THE SECOND GREAT SIEGE
CHAPTER 6 The Fortress
CHAPTER 7 Gladiators
CHAPTER 8 From Nelson to Cunningham
CHAPTER 9 Debut of the Luftwaffe
CHAPTER 10 Siege on the RAF
PART III ALLIES
CHAPTER 11 Out of Norway
CHAPTER 12 Operation Harpoon
CHAPTER 13 Malta’s Last Hope
CHAPTER 14 SS Santa Elisa, June 23
CHAPTER 15 SS Ohio, June 23
PART IV OPERATION PEDESTAL
CHAPTER 16 Master Dudley Mason
CHAPTER 17 The Clyde
CHAPTER 18 Cairo
CHAPTER 19 Admiral Neville Syfret
CHAPTER 20 Lieutenant Commander Roger Hill
CHAPTER 21 Operation Berserk
PART V INTO THE MEDITERRANEAN
CHAPTER 22 Operation Bellows
CHAPTER 23 Dive of the Eagle
CHAPTER 24 Dive-Bombers at Dusk
CHAPTER 25 Bad Day for Secret Weapons
CHAPTER 26 Ithuriel and Indomitable
CHAPTER 27 Nigeria and Cairo
CHAPTER 28 Captain Ferrini’s Amazing Hat Trick
PART VI HELL IN THE NARROWS
CHAPTER 29 This One’s for Minda
Photo Insert
CHAPTER 30 Screams on the Water
CHAPTER 31 Moscow
CHAPTER 32 Retreat of the Commodore
CHAPTER 33 Il Duce’s Pajamas
CHAPTER 34 Night of the E-Boats
CHAPTER 35 Hell in the Aftermath
PART VII SURVIVORS
CHAPTER 36 Santa Elisa
CHAPTER 37 Waimarama
CHAPTER 38 Swerving Toward Malta
CHAPTER 39 Just a Mirage
CHAPTER 40 Lame Duck off Linosa
CHAPTER 41 Nowhere to Hide
PART VIII TWO MEN, ONE WARRIOR
CHAPTER 42 Black Dog
CHAPTER 43 The Bofors
CHAPTER 44 Nerves of Steel
CHAPTER 45 The Teetering Tirade
CHAPTER 46 Nine Down, Four Home, One to Go
CHAPTER 47 Grand Harbour
CHAPTER 48 Moscow Saturday Night
CHAPTER 49 The Cablegram
CHAPTER 50 Malta Rises
AFTERWORD
LIST OF SHIPS
SOURCE NOTES AND ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
BIBLIOGRAPHY
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
ALSO BY SAM MOSES
COPYRIGHT
For Grandma Moses, who lived to see it
PART I •••
FATE IN THE CONVERGENCE
CHAPTER 1 •••
MALTA, SUMMER OF 1942
In the summer of 1942, scores of thousands of men, women, and children were starving and living in caves and tunnels on Malta, a block of limestone the size of Cape Cod rising out of the Mediterranean like a little white pebble kicked by the toe of the boot of Italy.
The island had been under siege for two years. Malta was the most heavily bombed place on Earth, with more bombs falling in April and May than during the entire summer and fall of the Battle of Britain. German and Italian planes flew from airfields on Sicily, just sixty miles north of Malta. If Italy was the boot kicking Malta, Sicily hung over the island like the massive other shoe, ready to drop.
“Malta is not only as bright a gem as shines in the King’s Crown, but its effective action against the enemy communications with Libya and Egypt is essential to the whole strategic position in the Middle East,” Prime Minister Winston Churchill told the House of Commons. It was an understatement for him. Sometimes stubborn but never alone on the issue, Churchill believed that Malta must survive for the war to be won. He might have echoed Admiral Lord Horatio Nelson, who wrote, “Malta, my dear sir, is in my thoughts sleeping and waking,” to the Russian prime minister in 1799.
“It was evident that Malta, laying as it does in the very center of the Mediterranean, and flanking the Italian lifeline between Italy and North Africa, was not only of the greatest importance, but was, in fact, the vital key point which must be held at all costs,” said Governor-General William Dobbie. “Its loss would obviously open the door to disasters of the first magnitude, the outcome of which was not good to contemplate.”
“I cannot believe that Malta was more desirable a prize [for the Axis] than Moscow, but there was really no comparison,” said Air Marshal Hugh Lloyd, the Royal Air Force commander on Malta in 1942. “Malta stood athwart the path to Cairo and our oil in Iraq, and had to be eliminated first of all.”
It was all about oil, again. Churchill called Malta the “windlass of the tourniquet” on the supply lines of General Erwin Rommel’s Afrika Korps, and Rommel was after the Mideast oil, which fueled the British war effort. Axis convoys from Italy to North Africa kept Rommel in supplies, but submarines and bombers from Malta destroyed much of that shipping; bombers also made runs over North Africa, striking truck convoys. If Malta were to fall, and the Luftwaffe and Italian Navy were to move in where the Royal Air Force and Royal Navy were desperately hanging on, Churchill believed it would be impossible for the British Army to keep Rommel from marching across North Africa and taking Egypt. After that, the Mideast oil fields would be lost. Syria, Turkey, Iraq, and Persia (Iran) would be Hitler’s.
This was Hitler’s “Great Plan,” in which his army would conquer Russia, come down through the Caucasus, and meet the Afrika Korps to complete a Nazi wall encircling Europe, looping clockwise from Scandinavia to Spain, confining and enslaving Europe.
“With Malta in our hands, the British would have had little chance of exercising any further control over convoy traffic in the Central Mediterranean,” said Rommel, who pushed Hitler for an invasion of the island, to get it out of his way.
“Malta was really the linchpin of the campaign in the Mediterranean,” said Admiral Andrew Cunningham, Commander in Chief of the British naval forces in the Mediterranean and Britain’s greatest admiral since Nelson. “The island served as the principal operational base for the surface ships, submarines and aircraft working against the Axis supply line to North Africa. The Navy had always regarded the island as the keystone of victory in the Mediterranean, and considered it should be held at all costs.”
Cunningham’s German counterpart, Admiral Eberhard Weichold, wrote in a report to Hitler, “It cannot be emphasized sufficiently often, that a Malta capable of fighting is essential to the possibility of effective action against the African supply route for the Panzer army, and, moreover, a cornerstone in the whole defense of Egypt and the English position in the Mediterranean and the Middle East. I see only one possibility, and that is through a strategical offensive: The British Air Force in the Central Mediterranean, that is Malta, must be obliterated.”
“There was no lasting solution for the enemy short of the conquest of Malta,” said Churchill.
The stomachs of the Maltese might have been empty, but their hearts were pure and their faith indomitable, and they didn’t die easily. They had been digging into the limestone and living in caves forever, and their tolerance was nearly as strong as their belief in the power of the Virgin Mary. There are limestone temples on Malta five thousand years old, the most ancient man-made structures in Europe, older than the Egyptian Pyramids. They were built like bomb shelters ahead of their time, with altars believed to be for worship.
Seventy-eight churches, thirteen hospitals, and twenty-one schools h
ad been bombed in the two years since the beginning of the siege. Luftwaffe and Regia Aeronautica bombers had made thousands of runs over Malta, destroying an uncountable number of other buildings and killing more than five hundred people in April alone. The magnificent Opera House in Valletta had been reduced to rubble, and it remains a monument in ruin to this day. A 500-pound bomb fell through the Mosta Dome in the ancient walled city of Mdina, skidded across the floor of the church as three hundred people were praying, and came to a stop without exploding. It was clearly a miracle, they all said.
The bombers turned the towns to mountains of limestone rubble, and then turned the big blocks of rubble into smaller blocks: rubble to rubble, dust to dust. Sometimes a house that had been bombed to rubble became a family’s new home, its limestone blocks rearranged into a limestone cave. Or sometimes a family moved out of a perfectly good home and into the security of a cave, which they often dug themselves. Some of the caves were no more than big dents in a cliff, which the Maltese called “caterpillar caves.” They also called them “ready-made graves.”
The soft limestone hardened when exposed to the salt air. Irish coal miners were brought in to help dig the caves, because they had the skills, and because the Maltese men worked all day in the dockyards or manned the antiaircraft guns around the harbor and at the edges of the island. The possibilities for tunnels were endless. Passageways led to one- and two-room homes and communal areas. People in the cities around the harbor lived their hungry lives underground, sharing all the sights, sounds, and smells, all the fighting and loving and living and dying and sometimes birthing, and always the praying, with the Virgin Mary hovering in every cave.
Sand flies flew out of the cracks in the limestone, carrying their fever. Cockroaches, bedbugs, and lice ruled. The “Malta Dog,” a virulent form of dysentery, barked in the corners. The hunger never went away.
Lacking a river, forests, and rich soil, Malta could provide little of its own food and none of its fuel, so its survival depended upon cargo ships. Supplies coming from Gibraltar, 999 miles to the west, and Alexandria, 866 miles east, had been cut off by Axis air forces and navies. Some foodstuffs trickled in over the “Magic Carpet,” a slim trail of fast minesweepers and minelaying submarines from Alexandria, but not nearly enough to sustain the island’s 270,000 people.
The Maltese lived mostly on rationed bread, olive oil, and tomato paste, drank homemade wine they called “screech,” and smoked bamboo for want of tobacco. The macaroni factory operated only when there was flour. Citrus, fig, date, and almond trees grew wild on the island, but they were perpetually picked clean. Adult males received a weekly ration of six ounces of rice, six ounces of preserved meat, six ounces of preserved fish, and five ounces of cheese. Women and children received less. Victory kitchens served one thin meal a day, maybe a skinny sausage and some peas; the goats had all been eaten, and the spring potato crop had failed. Chickens, eggs, milk, and fruit were sold on the black market, but the price was beyond reach to all but a few. Beasts of burden killed by bombs were bled and butchered if it could be done before they began to rot.
By the summer of 1942, any freighter sent to Malta was virtually on a suicide run. The sea was prowled by vicious “wolfpacks” of Axis submarines. The sky was blotched by aircraft from Sicily, Sardinia, and Libya, the Italian colony stretching much of the length of the North African coast. Fast and deadly torpedo boats, which the Italians called E-boats, owned the night.
The 10th Submarine Flotilla on Malta had done its best to protect the cargo ships coming in, but a handful of subs running on empty wasn’t enough for the job. The flotilla’s home was on the fifty-acre Manoel Island in Marsamxett Harbor, where its personnel hunkered down against the bombing in the sheltered limestone buildings of a former lazzaretto, which had quarantined victims of the plague in the sixteenth century, and more recently been a leper hospital. But the Luftwaffe blitz in April had chased the “Fighting Tenth” to Alexandria, with its five remaining subs. There wasn’t enough diesel fuel left on Malta for them, anyhow.
That left the defense of the island up to the Royal Malta Artillery and the struggling Royal Air Force, which flew from three primitive bases on the island. But diesel fuel was needed by the generators making electricity for the RMA antiaircraft batteries, which were connected by wires strung across the island and could be controlled by one man in a bunker, like a wizard showering the sky with shrapnel and big bangs. Generators also powered the searchlights and radar stations that spotted enemy aircraft.
Meanwhile, the RAF bombers and fighters were running on fumes. The RAF was so low on aviation fuel that planes were towed by a tractor to the runway, to save the pints used by taxiing. When the last tractor was blown up by bombs, the ground crews began pushing the planes.
In addition to the diesel needed by the submarine fleet, fuel oil was needed by the Royal Navy warships, minesweepers, and tugboats, a few of which were based on Malta, with others coming and going. The movement of the fleet into the central Mediterranean from Gibraltar or Alexandria required the refueling in Malta of destroyers and sometimes a battleship. But by the summer of 1942, the fuel was no longer there for them.
Kerosene was also needed on the island, for heat, light, and cooking. It was rationed and sold from carts guarded by policemen, to prevent black market sales.
The diesel, fuel oil, and kerosene were often blended, leaving little distinction. The submarines, warships, freighters, and antiaircraft guns used any and all of it for fuel. Malta’s survival was down to one thing: a tanker carrying oil must get in.
It had been nine months since a convoy with freighters had made it to Valletta, Malta’s harbor city. Eight solo cargo ships had trickled through in that time, but that scarcely postponed the reckoning. Malta’s days were numbered, literally; a secret countdown was on, to September 7. Governor Dobbie had recently taken an inventory of the food and fuel, and had informed Prime Minister Churchill that if a convoy didn’t get through by then, Malta would be forced to capitulate to the Axis.
CHAPTER 2 •••
FRED AND MINDA
Frederick August Larsen, Jr., was born in Newark, New Jersey, in 1915, to a Norwegian father and Irish mother. His spine began turning to steel when he was three years and nine months old, when in one deadly week in December 1918, his father, mother, a sister, and Irish grandmother died at home, victims of the great influenza pandemic that made orphans out of 21,000 children in New York alone. A month later his Irish grandfather, who carved model ships out of wood for a living, also died from the flu.
Children were rarely struck by this flu, but they were severely affected by what they saw; and in his parents’ small house, young Freddie couldn’t be sheltered from pain.
The symptoms of the virus were unimaginable. Delirium was common and pain was intense. Blood ran from eye sockets, eardrums burst, and ribs cracked during violent coughing fits. Air bubbles in lung tissue popped with a sound like Rice Krispies. By the time victims died, they often wanted to.
When the boy looked out the window to escape the suffering in the rooms behind him, he saw horse-drawn wagons with black-clad drivers clopping down empty streets, calling for families in shuttered houses to bring out their dead, to be buried in mass graves dug by steam shovels.
For about a year after his parents, sister, and grandmother died, Freddie lived with his Norwegian grandmother in Brooklyn, along with his sister, Christina, fourteen years of age, and brother, Clarence, only two. Money from the sale of his family’s furniture was used to buy him a steamship ticket to Norway, where he was raised by an uncle and aunt. They lived in a little white house clustered with others like it, exposed to the icy wind on the rocky seaside cliffs of remote Sandessjoen, on the western coast.
His uncle John Tonnessen was a big man with a big heart. As one of Norway’s chief customs inspectors, he knew almost every ship’s master in the Norwegian fleet. His work sometimes took him to sea, and he took Fred along whenever he could. He and the boy bec
ame inseparable. But Tonnessen’s big heart failed him when Fred was fourteen. Two dads down, in ten years.
At seventeen, Fred left home for a life of his own at sea. He signed on as a deck boy on the MV Attila, a Norwegian tanker sailing for California and China. Six years later he came back to Norway, to attend the Mates and Masters Maritime College in Farsund, on the southern tip of Norway. By now he was a handsome, strapping young man, five feet eleven and 180 pounds, with clear blue eyes and sandy hair, with curls that appeared to be piled on top of his head because he cut the sides so short. He could flash a smile that looked almost feminine, but he didn’t give it up easily. He also had a don’t-mess-with-me glare that made men around him think he could break them like sticks, if he needed to.
He met the love of his life during his first semester at the Mates and Masters College, in 1937. He was looking out to sea when Cupid smacked him between the eyes with a snowball lobbed by a beautiful girl, which is how Minda Heskestad got his attention. She was twenty-one, the ninth of ten children born on a farm over a period of twenty-eight years, and until the day Fred died, he called her “my Norwegian princess.”
He married Minda, graduated, and went back to sea, all in the busy spring and summer of 1939. As they kissed good-bye on the dock in Farsund, Minda was already pregnant. He boarded a steamship bound for Germany, where he traveled across the country by train, getting a scary look at life under Nazi control, and then caught a freighter from Amsterdam to New York.
He had left Minda in Norway only because they agreed it was best for her to have the baby in Farsund, with family and friends around her. They hadn’t been thinking of war, which broke out in September when Germany invaded Poland. And they had never imagined that Norway would be occupied by Nazis.
“The only thing Fred wanted to do was go to sea,” said Minda. “He had to earn some money. He thought he could send for me to come to the U.S. as soon as our child was born.”
Germany invaded Norway by sea on April 9, 1940. That was their first wedding anniversary, and streets full of Nazis weren’t much of a gift for Minda. Larsen was quartermaster on the City of Norfolk, a 1918 freighter converted to carry passengers, steaming between New York and Liverpool. He immediately petitioned the ship’s owners, United States Lines, to carry his wife and baby son back from Liverpool, if he could get them there. There was family in New York waiting for them, including his sister and brother, whom he had scarcely seen in the years since influenza had ripped them apart.