Dragoon Jeep Carriers IN COLOR!

Check out this beautiful original Kodachrome. Official caption: “Southern France Invasion, August 1944. USS Kasaan Bay (CVE-69) seen through signal flags of USS Tulagi (CVE-72), on ‘D-Day’ off Southern France, 15 August 1944.”

Photo by Miller. National Archives Catalog #: 80-G-K-15369

Casablanca-class escort carriers, Kasaan Bay and Tulagi were built nearly side-by-side by Kaiser Co., Inc. in Vancouver under a Maritime Commission contract on freighter hulls. Commissioned by the Navy on 4 December and 21 December 1943, respectively, after workups and moving from the Pacific Northwest around the globe to the Med, the twins were in RADM Calvin T. Durgin’s Task Group 27.7 for the Dragoon landings along the Riviera, just eight months after commissioning.

DANFS on Kasaan Bay’s landing operations:

Kasaan Bay departed Malta on 12 August, and 3 days later arrived in the invasion area off the French Riviera. Planes from the carrier bombed and strafed German positions, destroying hundreds of enemy vehicles and tanks and downing two enemy aircraft over the beach. She completed her assignment on 30 August and departed Oran, Algeria, on 6 September, arriving in Norfolk 12 days later.

DANFS on Tulagi’s Dragoon days:

On D-day, Tulagi steamed in formation 45 miles off the invasion beach; and, at 0546, she launched her first flight of Hellcats. In the next week, aircraft from Tulagi flew a total of 68 missions and 276 sorties, inflicting considerable damage on the enemy. Weather was generally good as carrier-based planes conducted spotting missions and made strikes at various targets ashore, including gun emplacements and railway facilities. On 21 August, Tulagi’s last day in support of Operation “Dragoon,” German forces were in retreat before the Allied thrust. Tulagi’s fliers conducted a devastating attack along the line of march of a German convoy which snarled the roads for miles around Remouline and crowned her achievements of the day by downing three German Ju 52s.

A U.S. Navy F6F Hellcat fighter of VOF-1 is waved off during a landing attempt on USS Tulagi (CVE-72) after a close air support mission over southern France during Operation Dragoon, D-day, 15 August 1944 (80-G-K-15370).

The remainder of the war for these twins saw them in the Pacific, lending their 500-foot decks and composite air wings on the drive to the Japanese Home Islands, assigned alternately to antisubmarine and direct support activities.

Inactivated in 1946, with one carrier laid up on the Pacific Fleet mothballs and the other on the Atlantic, they were sold for scrap by the 1960s

Tulagi received four battle stars for World War II service while Kasaan Bay, who saw less Pacific action, only received one.

The ‘Fighting I’ at 80

The 4th U.S. Navy warship to carry the name USS Intrepid was a fleet carrier (CV-11) of the short-hulled Essex class rushed into service in World War II. Only the third Essex completed, she commissioned at Newport News, 16 August 1943– some 80 years ago this week.

USS Intrepid (CV-11) off Newport News, Virginia, on 16 August 1943, the day she went into commission. U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command Photograph. NH 53254

Just five months to the day later, her shakedown completed, Intrepid sortied from Pearl Harbor with the carriers USS Cabot (CVL-29) and USS Essex (CV-9) on 16 January 1944 to raid islands at the northeastern corner of Kwajalein Atoll, her baptism of fire.

And she would reap the Divine Wind.

USS Intrepid (CV 11) on fire after being hit by two Japanese suicide planes, on 25 November 1944. 80-G-270835

Ultimately, in a career that spanned almost 31 years, Intrepid (CV/CVA/CVS-11) earned five battle stars and the Presidential Unit Citation during WWII, and a further three battle stars for her Vietnam service. She was also active in the space program and was the primary recovery ship for Mercury-Atlas 7 (MA-7, Scott Carpenter) and Gemini-Titan 3 (GT-3, Gus Grissom, and John Young).

March 1965. USS Intrepid (CVS-11) pulls up alongside the Gemini-3 spacecraft during recovery operations following the successful Gemini-Titan 3 flight. Navy swimmers stand on the spacecraft’s flotation collar waiting to hook a hoist line to the Gemini-3. Courtesy of the NASA Photograph Collection. S65-18528

After eight years in mothballs, in 1982 Intrepid became the foundation of the Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum in New York City where she remains lovingly cared for today– and still stands ready as a local Homeland Security role in times of crisis.

Happy birthday, Intrepid!

That’s a wrap after 36 years: USS Mobile Bay Decommissions

Only the seventh Tico completed– and the second Flight II Mark 41 Vertical Launch System (VLS) Variant– USS Mobile Bay (CG 53) was commissioned at the Alabama State Docks in Mobile in 1987, ready to take on the Red Banner Fleet. At age 13, and a huge naval nerd, I was there, talking about Farragut (my hometown Pascagoula hero) the whole time.

330-CFD-DN-SN-89-03091: An explosion sprays water high above the guided missile cruiser USS Mobile Bay (CG-53) as the ship undergoes a shock test. Exact Date Shot Unknown, 5/1/1988

Now, after standing by for the end of the Soviet fleet and firing Tomahawks at Iraq in two different wars a decade apart, her flags were lowered at San Diego last Friday. One of four long-serving Ticos that the Navy asked to retire this year.

SAN DIEGO (Aug.10, 2023) – The Ticonderoga-class guided-missile cruiser USS Mobile Bay (CG 53) sits pier side during a decommissioning ceremony. The Mobile Bay was decommissioned after more than 36 years of distinguished service. Commissioned Feb. 21, 1987, Mobile Bay served in the U.S. Atlantic, Seventh, and U.S. Pacific Fleet and supported Operation Desert Storm. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Stevin C. Atkins)

Just 16 of 27 Ticos remain in the fleet, with the last expected to retire in 2027. It is argued that Flight III Burkes take the place of these ships, as they have a marginally better (depending on who you talk to) sensor suite, but it is rarely pointed out that these destroyers still just carry 96 VLS cells rather than the 122 of the Ticos and don’t have the same AAW battle group control capability as the old Aegis cruisers.

Nonetheless, “Mobile Bay will be inactivated and towed to the Navy’s Inactive Ship’s facility in Bremerton, Washington where they will be in a Logistic Support Asset (LSA) status,” although Navy shipbuilding plans say she will be listed in a better maintained “Out of Commission in Reserve (OCIR)” status, so, in theory, she may come back to life in needed in the next couple of years.

125 Years Ago: The Spanish American War Halts

Spain declared war on the United States on 23 April 1898– after a pretty intolerable ultimatum from Washington that included a call for 125,000 volunteers and orders for a naval blockade of Cuba– and the U.S. Congress eagerly reciprocated and voted to go to war against Spain two days later.

“The man behind the gun will settle this war,” Puck cover, published by Keppler & Schwarzmann, 1898 July 13. LOC LC-DIG-ppmsca-28717

The future Secretary of State John Hay described the ensuing conflict as a “splendid little war” and for good reason, as it was a fairly lopsided string of victories (with Spanish wins at Tayacoba, Manzanillo, and Mani-Mani forgotten to history) and, after much bloodletting, a cease-fire was announced on 12 August, closing the very modern ten-week war fought across the Caribbean and the Pacific.

While the Navy folded several captured Spanish ships into the U.S. fleet— some of which remained in service until the 1950s!— other more enduring relics and monuments dot the country.

One gun, an M1860 Trubia 6.3-inch MLR that sat at the U.S. Naval Magazine at Subic until it closed in 1992, was subsequently removed by Seabees and brought to Gulfport, then donated to the Mississippi Armed Forces Museum at Camp Shelby in 2006, where it remains today. 

The circa 1862 M1860 Trubia gun, formerly a gate guard at the U.S. Navy Magazine, Subic Bay, now at Camp Shelby.

How it looked back prior to 1992

Nowhere has more SpanAm War markers and monuments than Arlington.

These include the USS Maine Mast Memorial (Section 24), the Spanish-American War Memorial (Section 22), the Spanish-American War Nurses Memorial (Section 21), the Rough Riders Monument (Section 22), and the Buffalo Soldiers Memorial (Section 22) as well as hundreds of graves of servicemembers who served during the conflict.

FN downshifting features for discounts

In the past couple of years, I’ve been reviewing a lot of FN handguns. Like, a lot.

Some of the cooler ones have been a series of “Tactical” big bores, specifically the 10mm FN 510 and .45 ACP FN 545. Introduced earlier this year, sports 4.71-inch extended threaded barrels, protective “dog ear” housings around the rear sights, and ships with extended magazines, capable of holding as many as 22+1 rounds.

510 and 545 Tactical models seen here (Photo: Chris Eger)

Well, FN just this week introduced a more carry-friendly take on the 510 and 545, with new MRD models that run more standard-length 4.1-inch barrels, have 15+1 round magazines, and drop the “ears” for an easier tuck. Plus, they are like $120 cheaper.

Like the FN 510 and FN 545 Tactical, the compact introduced a sub-caliber .22LR rimfire trainer with the same feature set: the FN 502 Tactical.

FN 502 Tactical (Photo: Chris Eger)

Similarly, FN just debuted a less “tacti-cool” model of the FN 502 this week as well.

The new FN 502 MRD drops the extended barrel and magazine but still has all the other features– and about a $90 drop in price.

Know Your F-16 care and feeding? Looking to travel to Eastern Europe for fun and profit?

Florida-based Draken International, a top-end commercial training and aggressor company that operates F-16s and Mirage F.1s among other types, is “Looking for former or current F16 technicians for employment in Europe.”

The job openings are for crew chiefs, avionics, and general maintenance techs with experience on F-16A/B aircraft, and a willingness to travel to Romania.

The country– which shares a 300-mile border with Ukraine– retired its last of some 400 MiG-21s earlier this year.

Romania now uses a squadron of 17 second-hand F-16AM/BM Block 15s (!) bought recently from Portugal, and signed a contract with Norway in November 2022 to another 32 additional 40-year-old F-16A/Bs for 388 million euros, to ensure the future transition to the new F-35 fighter jet. All of the RoAF F-16s are set to be upgraded to M6.5.2 operating configuration, with Kongsberg providing support– and apparently, Draken tapped in as a subcontractor.

It is not surprising that the work is being farmed out, as a lot of the extra bandwidth with F-16 techs in NATO is being contributed to the effort to get Ukraine’s pre-owned donated Vipers in the air sometime this year. Reportedly, 11 different countries are coming together on that project.

Besides the Ukraine F-16s, a lot of the guys with that skillset who are willing to travel have been in Iraq for the past couple of years off and on, with their late-model F-16IQ birds being kept in the air and regularly bombing ISIS targets largely via commercial Western support.

Full Color Ozzie Growler

I do love full-color livery on warbirds. Check out this bad boy coming in to refuel.

Official caption: A Royal Australian Air Force Boeing E/A-18G Growler electronic warfare aircraft, #306 (Bu No. 169153) from No. 6 Squadron conducting a sortie during Exercise Talisman Sabre 23 over the Northern Territory, 26 July 2023.

Australian Defense Imagery TS20230096. Photographer: LAC Chris Tsakisiris

Note the anti-radiation HARM missile, AN/ALQ-218 wideband receivers on the wingtips, and ALQ-99 high and low-band tactical jamming pods.

Of the 172 Growlers produced thus far, almost all are in the U.S. Navy’s 16 VAQ squadrons. The sole current overseas operator is the RAAF which took possession of a baker’s dozen of aircraft for A$125 million a pop between 2015 and 2017 and achieved IOC in 2019.

Interestingly, besides the EW/SEAD role, the Australians use the Growler as a sort of replacement for the retired F-111 bomber, equipped with an ATFLIR targeting pod and assorted LGBs as well as the option for JSOW.

No, 6 RAAF dates back to 1939 and earned an impressive record in the Pacific during WWII. 

119,000-ton unofficial carrier four-pack

So the recent biannual Talisman Saber 2023 exercise had a supercarrier in attendance, at least partially: the forward-deployed (to Japan) Nimitz-class USS Ronald Reagan and her strike group.

However, it also had four “other” non-carrier flattops on hand as well: the 27,000-ton Australian Canberra-class landing helicopter dock ship HMAS Adelaide (L01), the 45,000-ton amphibious assault ship USS America (LHA 6), the 27,000-ton Japanese “helicopter destroyer” JS Izumo (DDH 183), and the 20,000-ton Korean Dokdo-class amphibious assault ship ROKS Marado (LPH 6112).

(U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Thomas B. Contant)

(U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Thomas B. Contant)

Three of the four are at least theoretically capable of operating STOVL F-35Bs as “Lightning Carriers”— and indeed, America had a detachment of Marine Lightning Bugs embarked– while the Koreans have been brainstorming running the aircraft from the Dokdo-class.

Sure, it is soft airpower as it would be hard for this quartet, even if fully loaded with all the F-35s they could park, to replicate the “throw weight” of a fully-loaded CVN. However, it is more underway airpower than Japan, South Korea, and Australia had a decade ago.

And the pictures of the complete formation are pretty sweet.

(U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Thomas B. Contant)

(U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Thomas B. Contant)

Official caption (emphasis mine)

CORAL SEA (July 29, 2023) The forward-deployed amphibious assault carrier USS America (LHA 6), sails in formation with the Royal Australian Navy Canberra-class landing helicopter dock ship HMAS Adelaide (L01), Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force helicopter destroyer JS Izumo (DDH 183), Republic of Korea Navy amphibious assault ship ROKS Marado (LPH 6112), amphibious transport dock ship USS Green Bay (LPD 20), amphibious transport dock ship USS New Orleans (LPD 18), Royal Australian Navy landing ship HMAS Choules (L100), Republic of Korea Navy destroyer ROKS Munmu The Great (DDH 976), guided-missile destroyer USS Rafael Peralta (DDG 115), dry cargo ship USNS Matthew Perry (T-AKE-9), Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force tank landing ship, JS Shimokita (LST 4002), Royal Australian Navy replenishment oiler HMAS Stalwart (A304) and fleet replenishment oiler USNS Tippecanoe (T-AO 199) during a formation steaming exercise, as part of Exercise Talisman Sabre, July 29. America, the lead ship of the America Amphibious Ready Group, is operating in the U.S. 7th Fleet area of operations. U.S. 7th Fleet is the U.S. Navy’s largest forward-deployed numbered fleet and routinely interacts and operates with allies and partners in preserving a free and open Indo-Pacific region. Talisman Sabre is the largest bilateral military exercise between Australia and the United States advancing a free and open Indo-Pacific by strengthening relationships and interoperability among key allies and enhancing our collective capabilities to respond to a wide array of potential security concerns.

Warship Wednesday, Aug. 9, 2023: The Lost Desert Wind

Here at LSOZI, we take off every Wednesday for a look at the old steam/diesel navies of the 1833-1954 period and will profile a different ship each week. These ships have a life, a tale all their own, which sometimes takes them to the strangest places. – Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday, Aug. 9, 2023: The Lost Desert Wind

Photo by Stewart Bale Ltd, Liverpool, Imperial War Museums’ Foxhall Collection, no. IWM FL 19059 http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/205121477

Above we see the third flight S-class diesel boat, HM Submarine Simoom (P225), underway, likely in 1943, her only year of service. A rather unlucky boat, Simoom fired 15 war shot torpedoes in her career and, although she never hit a target that she intended to punch a hole into, she did manage to spectacularly claim her only “kill” some 80 years ago today.

The mighty S-class

Built to replace the aging boats in RN service, the first pair, HMS Swordfish, and HMS Sturgeon, were ordered in the 1929 program. Small boats, running just over 200 feet in overall length and displacing around 600 tons (900 submerged), they were relatively fast for the day, capable of breaking almost 14 knots on the surface, making them able to catch up to slow-moving merchantmen, and carried a full dozen Mark VIII torpedoes for their six-pack of forward 21-inch tubes. Meanwhile, a 3-inch deck gun and a Vickers light machine gun gave a topside armament. This could be augmented by a dozen mines. Able to operate in shallow waters, with a draft of only 10.5 feet, and able to submerge in 10 fathoms, they could crash dive in just 25-30 seconds with a good crew if needed.

Not bad for a 1920s design.

The 1929 Chatham Dockyard plan of the flight I S-class boats. Chatham would only produce two boats (HMS Shalimar and Sportsman), whereas most were built by Cammell Laird and smaller numbers by Scotts and Vickers.

As noted by Richard Worth in his Fleets of World War II:

“Meant as replacements for the old H-class, they required the same virtues of maneuverability and quick diving. But the Admiralty wanted more– improvements in range, armament, and surface speed. The “S” types became a pillar of His Majesty’s Submarine Force; not remarkable in any respect, rather they performed well all tasks at acceptable levels, a class of well-balanced and workmanlike boats that proved safe and easy to operate.”

A great period color shot of the S-class submarine HMS Seadog (P216), in the foreground moving off, Holy Loch, 1942. The Group 1 T-class submarine HMS Thunderbolt (N25) is in the background. Of note, Thunderbolt was originally HMS Thetis which sank with heavy loss of life in the Mediterranean just before the war and was subsequently salvaged. The two objects seen on her after casing are containers for human torpedo chariots. IWM TR 612

In all, the British would order no less than 73 S-class boats in three flights across 12 construction programs, and they would remain in production from 1930 through 1945, spanning both the interbellum and WWII era. In all, 62 were completed.

Meet HMS Simoom

The name “Simoom” after the desert wind, dates to an 1842 paddlewheel frigate and was used in no less than five other ships by the Royal Navy. The subject of our tale is the sixth and (thus far) final HMS Simoom.

Ordered in the largest batch of S-class boats (20 hulls) under the 1940 war program, she was a third flight vessel and as such had several minor improvements including a slightly higher freeboard forward, a less complicated and simplified engineering layout that allowed a maximum speed approaching 15 knots (one of the batch, HMS Seraph, could hit 16.75 knots). She also had a seventh tube installed, an external one, giving her 13 torpedoes in total. Also, in lieu of a Vickers gun, the 3rd flight S-boats carried a 20mm Oerlikon AAA gun and a primitive air warning RDF receiver. They also carried a Type 138 ASDIC system and a Type 291/291W early-warning radar.

Laid down at Cammell Laird, Birkenhead (a yard that built at least 26 of the class) on 14 July 1941, Simoom was launched the following October and commissioned on 30 December 1942, her construction spanning just under 17 months.

A series of great images were captured of her in April 1943, steaming in conjunction with the captured German Type VIIC U-boat U-570 (HMS Graph, P715).

HM SUBMARINE SIMMOM AND GRAPH AT HOLY LOCH. 20 APRIL 1943, HOLY LOCH. (A 16049) HMS SIMOOM (right) and HMS GRAPH. Copyright: © IWM. Original Source: http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/205149055

HM SUBMARINE SIMOOM. 20 APRIL 1943, HOLY LOCH. (A 16041) The SIMOOM from the beam. Copyright: © IWM. Original Source: http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/205149047

HM SUBMARINE SIMOOM. 20 APRIL 1943, HOLY LOCH. (A 16047) The SIMOOM from dead ahead. Copyright: © IWM. Original Source: http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/205149053

HM SUBMARINES SIMOOM AND GRAPH. 20 APRIL 1943, HOLY LOCH. (A 16048) HMS SIMOOM (nearer) and HMS GRAPH together at Holy Loch. Copyright: © IWM. Original Source: http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/205149054

HM SUBMARINE SIMOOM. 20 APRIL 1943, HOLY LOCH. (A 16043) The SIMOOM from the beam. Copyright: © IWM. Original Source: http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/205149049

HMS SIMOOM, BRITISH S-CLASS SUBMARINE. 20 APRIL 1943, HOLY LOCH. (A 16045) Copyright: © IWM. Original Source: http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/205149051

HM SUBMARINE SIMOOM. 20 APRIL 1943, HOLY LOCH. (A 16043) The SIMOOM from the beam. Copyright: © IWM. Original Source: http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/205149049

As detailed by Uboat.net, her wartime service was brief.

Her first war patrol off Northern Norway to provide cover for convoy operations to and from Northern Russia in early 1943 was uneventful as was her second in the Bay of Biscay.

Transferring to the still very active Med, her third patrol, off the West coasts of Corsica and Sardinia was a bust.

Her 4th, providing coverage for the invasion of Sicily harassed some coastal shipping and, in the end, she would sink the Italian destroyer Vincenzo Gioberti on 9 August 1943.

Simoon had fired a brace of six torpedoes at the big boys of RADM Giuseppe Fioravanzo’s 8th Cruiser Division (light cruisers Giuseppe Garibaldi and Emanuele Filiberto Duca d’Aosta) but caught the smaller Vincenzo Gioberti instead, making her the last Italian tin can sunk in the war.

Italian destroyer Vincenzo Gioberti, photographed before World War II. NH 47663

She is believed to have taken 95 men to the bottom with her after dramatically breaking in two parts and sinking. Some 171 survivors of Gioberti were recovered by MAS torpedo boats from La Spezia.

The end of Italian destroyer Vincenzo Gioberti, torpedoed by HMS Simoom on 9 August 1943. She was the last Regia Marina destroyer to be lost in the war against the Allies. Photo by “Storia Illustrata” magazine

Other rather sedate patrols followed.

The mysterious end of Simoom‘s tale came in November while on her 7th patrol.

Via Uboat.net:

2 Nov 1943
HMS Simoom (Lt. G.D.N. Milner, DSC, RN) departed Port Said for 7th war patrol (5th in the Mediterranean). She was ordered to patrol between Naxos and Mikonos, Greece. At 1142B/2 she reported that she did not hold the letter coordinates for November and would use those of October. This prompted Captain S.1 to communicate them the following evening.

On the 5th she was ordered to patrol off the Dardanelles, five nautical miles west of Tenedos.

On the 13th she was ordered to leave her patrol area PM on the 15th passing between Psara and Khios, through 35°06’N, 26°44’E and then on the surface from 34°25’N, 29°59′ E. She was due in Beirut at 0901B/20 but this was later corrected to the 19th.

Simoom did not show up at Beirut. She was declared overdue on 23 November 1943.

At 1729 hours, on 15 November, the German submarine U-565 (KL Fritz Henning) fired a single stern torpedo from 2000 metres at a target described as “probably a submarine” on course 250°, one hit was heard after 3 minutes and 48 seconds. The position recorded was Quadrat CO 3381 (36°51’N, 27°22’E or off the east coast of Kos) and it is unlikely that HMS Simoom was in the area. Post-war analysis concluded that she was probably mined on 4 November 1943 on a new minefield laid off Donoussa Island (ca. 37°06’N, 25°50’E).

Her roll of lost, marked “missing presumed killed” 19 November 1943:

ADAM, William G, Able Seaman, P/JX 344969, MPK
ANGLESEA, John, Engine Room Artificer 5c, D/MX 102924, MPK
BALSON, Lewis F C, Warrant Engineer, MPK
BEDFORD, Maurice A, Ty/Leading Seaman, D/SSX 27992, MPK
BROADBRIDGE, Thomas G, Stoker 1c, C/KX 83568, MPK
CASPELL, George E, Telegraphist, C/JX 163711, MPK
COLE, Edward, Stoker Petty Officer, P/KX 83973, MPK
CROSS, Charles M, Ty/Sub Lieutenant, RNVR, MPK
DAY, Horace C, Signalman, C/JX 207606, MPK
ELLIN, Sidney, Petty Officer Telegraphist, C/JX 135616, MPK
ELLIOTT, Robert, Able Seaman, P/JX 322974, MPK
FRANCIS, Rolland J, Stoker 1c, D/KX 137871, MPK
GARBETT, Basil M, Lieutenant, MPK
GILL, Geoffrey, Able Seaman, C/JX 235129, MPK
GOWLAND, William R, Able Seaman, D/SSX 15958, MPK
GRIFFITH, Ben, Petty Officer, D/J 113001, MPK
HANNANT, James H, Able Seaman, D/JX 202875, MPK
HARRIS, Walter, Stoker 1c, D/KX 134758, MPK
HATTON, Charles W, Able Seaman, C/JX 169095, MPK
HERD, Charles E, Ordinary Seaman, P/JX 281907, MPK
HERSTELL, Norman, Able Seaman, P/JX 347783, MPK
JOHNSON, Robert J, Able Seaman, C/SSX 26525, MPK
JONES, Louis F, Ty/Sub Lieutenant, RNVR, MPK
KENNEDY, Gordon A, Leading Telegraphist, D/JX 154462, MPK
KERR, David A, Engine Room Artificer 4c, P/MX 55013, MPK
LANDING, John, Leading Stoker, P/KX 84477, MPK
LILLYCROP, Francis W, Stoker 1c, P/KX 145412, MPK
LOVELL, Ernest A, Able Seaman, P/SSX 18599, MPK
MARSDEN, Tom, Engine Room Artificer 4c, P/MX 79301, MPK
MASON, George H, Act/Leading Stoker, P/KX 90779, MPK
MAY, Sidney J, Able Seaman, C/SSX 30974, MPK
MCLENNAN, Harold B W, Ty/Act/Leading Telegraphist, C/JX 259236, MPK
MILNER, Geoffrey D N, Lieutenant, MPK
MORTIMER-LAMB, Robert J, Ty/Petty Officer, C/JX 145875, MPK
OLDING, Walter G, Act/Chief Engine Room Artificer, P/MX 46951, MPK
O’LEARY, Michael T, Electrical Artificer 3c, D/MX49539, MPK
RAWE, James A, Act/Chief Petty Officer, RFR, P/JX 136102, MPK
SALMON, Alfred W, Able Seaman, P/JX 295724, MPK
SAUNDERS, Arthur, Able Seaman, P/JX 155201, MPK
SCHOFIELD, Bernard P, Able Seaman, C/JX 241234, MPK
SEABORNE, William J R, Stoker 1c, D/KX 94051, MPK
SHANKS, Thomas S, Ty/Sub Lieutenant, RNVR, MPK
SHARP, Norman, Able Seaman, D/JX 223594, MPK
SHEPHERD, John V, Stoker 1c, P/KX 83132, MPK
SMITH, William J, Stoker 1c, D/KX 145306, MPK
SONGHURST, Thomas J, Stoker 1c, C/KX 83463, MPK
TAYLOR, James, Engine Room Artificer 4c, C/MX 77617, MPK
WARDALE, Irvin, Able Seaman, D/JX 303574, MPK
WILSON, William, Act/Petty Officer, P/SSX 18131, MPK

Epilogue

In 2016, Turkish wreck-hunter Selcuk Kolay found HMS Simoom (P225) about 6 nautical miles northwest of the Turkish Aegean Island of Bozcaada (Tenedos) in 67 meters of water. There was extensive damage near the starboard hydroplane with the conclusion that Simoom had hit a mine while running on the surface. The mine Simoom hit was believed one sown by the German minelayer Bulgaria and the Italian torpedo boats Monzambano and Calatafimi in September 1941.

Likewise, Simoom’s only “kill,” the Italian destroyer Vincenzo Gioberti, had been discovered the year prior.

The Royal Navy’s wartime losses totaled 74 submarines. Of those, no less than 19 were S-class boats.

Across over 3,000 patrols, HM submarines sank 158 enemy combatant ships and damaged 54 others, in addition to sinking 1.6 million tons of enemy merchant shipping. A lot of that came from S-class boats.

Nonetheless, they were small and slow by postwar standards. By 1946, Janes listed just 39 S-class boats under the British fleet’s entry and a half-dozen of those warned “may be discarded in the near future.”

Soon, nine would be transferred to France, Portugal, and Israel.

One, HMS Sidon (P259), was wrecked by its own torpedo explosion on 16 June 1955 then refloated and sunk as a target. Another, HMS Sportsman/French submarine Sibylle, was lost off Toulon in 1952 in a diving accident.

Of the dwindling number of S boats still in RN service, most were withdrawn in the late 1940s and 1950s while still relatively young with just a couple lingering on for a few years longer. HMS Sea Devil, completed just after VE-Day, was paid off for disposal at Portsmouth on 4 June 1962, and was the last of the S class in service with the Royal Navy, completing 17 years of service. She was sold to the shipbreaker Metal Recoveries and arrived at Newhaven on 15 December 1965.

The sparsely used trio of boats operated postwar by Portugal (HMS Saga/NRP Nautilo, HMS Spearhead/NRP Nepunto, and HMS Spur/NRP Narval) were disposed of in 1969.

The last of the class afloat, HMS Springer, was used by Israel until 1972 as INS Tanin and had landed commandos in Egypt during the Six-Day War.

Submarine INS Tanin (ex-HMS Springer) arrives at Port of Haifa in 1959. She would be the last S-class boat


Ships are more than steel
and wood
And heart of burning coal,
For those who sail upon
them know
That some ships have a
soul.


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Marines Show off Shorty HK416s, M18s in Underway Small Arms Drills

Marines getting in some live-fire training, while embarked on a Navy amphibious warfare ship, were recently spotted with some interesting new gear. 

The Marines, part of the 26th Marine Expeditionary Unit (Special Operations Capable)’s Maritime Special Purpose Force, are currently deployed aboard the Wasp-class amphibious assault ship USS Bataan (LHD-5). An elite unit within an elite unit, the MSPF typically includes a SEAL Strike Platoon, a Force Recon Direct Action Platoon, and a platoon from the MEU(SOC)’s boat company, among others. That would explain the extensive use of M27s— itself a version of the well-liked Heckler & Koch HK 416 rifle– modified with HK’s Reconnaissance Weapon Kit. 

The recent photos of the 26th MEU(SOC)’s MSPF show Recon-kitted M27s complete with EoTech holographic sights and PEQ-16 flashlight/laser aiming devices. (Photo: Cpl. Kyle Jia/U.S. Marine Corps)

First spotted in use in 2021, the kit includes a 416A5 upper with an adjustable gas system and 11-inch barrel, allowing for a more compact and suppressor-friendly close-quarters weapon rather than the 16-inch barrel on the standard M27. 

For longer-range work, they have been seen with EoTech magnifiers as well. (Photo: Cpl. Kyle Jia/U.S. Marine Corps)

The SIG Sauer M18, recently adopted as standard across the Marine Corps, is also present on each of the MSPF members, complete with Surefire X300 lights, and lanyards.

(Photo: Cpl. Kyle Jia/U.S. Marine Corps)

(Photo: Cpl. Kyle Jia/U.S. Marine Corps)

(Photo: Cpl. Kyle Jia/U.S. Marine Corps)

As I previously reported, the Marines sought 35,000 of the smaller SIG Modular Handgun System variants to replace Beretta M9 pistols, Colt M45A1 CQB .45ACP railguns, and the M007 Glock.

The 26th MEU(SOC), embarked with the Bataan Amphibious Ready Group, has been deployed in European waters conducting exercises with NATO allies in the Mediterranean, but this week arrived in the Middle East to support deterrence efforts in the Strait of Hormuz, where Iran has been harassing oil tankers as of late

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