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American Theater (World War II)

The American Theater[1] was a theater of operations during World War II including all continental American territory, and extending 200 miles (320 km) into the ocean.

American Theater
Part of World War II

A United States Coast Guardsman on sentry duty in Alaska during World War II
Date1939–1945
Location
Result

Allied victory


  • Axis objectives failed or did not affect the outcome of the conflict.
Belligerents
Allies:
 United States
 Canada
 United Kingdom
 Brazil
 Mexico
Cuba
 Dominican Republic
 Haiti
 Peru
 Ecuador
 Bolivia
 Paraguay
 Panama
 Colombia
 Venezuela
 Nicaragua
Costa Rica
El Salvador
 Honduras
 Guatemala
 Chile (from 1945)
Argentina (from 1945)
Uruguay (from 1945)
Axis:
 Germany
 Japan
 Italy

Owing to North and South America's geographical separation from the central theaters of conflict (in Europe, the Mediterranean and Middle East, and the Pacific) the threat of an invasion of the continental U.S. or other areas in the Americas by the Axis Powers was negligible and the theater saw relatively little conflict. Military engagements include the Battle of the River Plate, submarine attacks off the East Coast, the Aleutian Islands campaign, the Battle of the St. Lawrence, and the attacks on Newfoundland. Espionage efforts included Operation Bolívar.

German operations Edit

South America Edit

 
Admiral Graf Spee burning and sinking off Montevideo

See also Latin America during World War II

Battle of the River Plate Edit

The first naval battle during the war was fought on December 13, 1939, off the Atlantic coast of South America. The German "pocket battleship" Admiral Graf Spee (acting as a commerce raider) encountered one of the British naval units searching for her. Composed of three Royal Navy cruisers, HMS Exeter, Ajax, and Achilles, the unit was patrolling off the River Plate estuary of Argentina and Uruguay. In a bloody engagement, Admiral Graf Spee successfully repulsed the British attacks. Captain Hans Langsdorff then brought his damaged ship to shelter in neutral Uruguay for repairs. However, British intelligence successfully deceived Langsdorff into believing that a much superior British force had now gathered to wait for him, and he scuttled his ship at Montevideo to save his crew's lives before committing suicide. German combat losses were 96 killed or wounded, against 72 British sailors killed and 28 wounded. Two Royal Navy cruisers had been severely damaged.[2]

Submarine warfare Edit

 
U-199 under attack by Brazilian Air Force PBY Catalina, 31 July 1943.

U-boat operations in the region (centered in the Atlantic Narrows between Brazil and West Africa) began in autumn 1940. After negotiations with Brazilian Foreign Minister Osvaldo Aranha (on behalf of dictator Getúlio Vargas), the U.S. introduced its Air Force along Brazil's coast in the second half of 1941. Germany and Italy subsequently extended their submarine attacks to include Brazilian ships wherever they were, and from April 1942 were found in Brazilian waters.[3] On 22 May 1942, the first Brazilian attack (although unsuccessful) was carried out by Brazilian Air Force aircraft on the Italian submarine Barbarigo.[4] After a series of attacks on merchant vessels off the Brazilian coast by U-507,[4] Brazil officially entered the war on 22 August 1942, offering an important addition to the Allied strategic position in the South Atlantic.[5] Although the Brazilian Navy was small, it had modern minelayers suitable for coastal convoy escort and aircraft which needed only small modifications to become suitable for maritime patrol.[6] During its three years of war, mainly in Caribbean and South Atlantic, alone and in conjunction with the U.S., Brazil escorted 3,167 ships in 614 convoys, totalling 16,500,000 tons, with losses of 0.1%.[7] Brazil saw three of its warships sunk and 486 men killed in action (332 in the cruiser Bahia); 972 seamen and civilian passengers were also lost aboard the 32 Brazilian merchant vessels attacked by enemy submarines.[8] American and Brazilian air and naval forces worked closely together until the end of the Battle. One example was the sinking of U-199 in July 1943, by a coordinated action of Brazilian and American aircraft.[9][10] Only in Brazilian waters, eleven other Axis submarines were known sunk between January and September 1943—the Italian Archimede and ten German boats: U-128, U-161, U-164, U-507, U-513, U-590, U-591, U-598, U-604, and U-662.[10][11][12]

By late 1943, the decreasing number of Allied shipping losses in South Atlantic coincided with the increasing elimination of Axis submarines operating there.[13] From then, the battle in the region was lost for Germans, even with the most of remaining submarines in the region receiving official order of withdrawal only in August of the following year, and with (Baron Jedburgh) the last Allied merchant ship sunk by a U-boat (U-532) there, on 10 March 1945.[14]

United States Edit

Duquesne Spy Ring Edit

 
Fritz Joubert Duquesne, FBI file photo

Even before the war, a large Nazi spy ring was found operating in the United States. As of 2023, the Duquesne Spy Ring is still the largest espionage case in United States history that ended in convictions. The 33 German agents who formed the Duquesne spy ring were placed in key jobs in the United States to get information that could be used in the event of war and to carry out acts of sabotage. One man opened a restaurant and used his position to get information from his customers; another worked at an airline so he could report Allied ships crossing the Atlantic Ocean; others in the ring worked as deliverymen so they could deliver secret messages alongside normal messages. The ring was led by Captain Fritz Joubert Duquesne, a South African Boer who spied for Germany in both World Wars and is best known as "The man who killed Kitchener" after he was awarded the Iron Cross for his key role in the sabotage and sinking of HMS Hampshire in 1916.[15] William G. Sebold, a double agent for the United States, was a major factor in the FBI's successful resolution of this case. For nearly two years, Sebold ran a secret radio station in New York for the ring. Sebold provided the FBI with information on what Germany was sending to its spies in the United States while allowing the FBI to control the information that was being transmitted to Germany. On June 29, 1941, six months before the U.S. declared war, the FBI acted. All 33 spies were arrested, found or pled guilty, and sentenced to serve a total of over 300 years in prison.[16]

Operation Pastorius Edit

After declaring war on the United States following the attack on Pearl Harbor, Adolf Hitler ordered the remaining German saboteurs to wreak havoc on America.[17] The responsibility for carrying this out was given to German Intelligence (Abwehr). In the spring of 1942, nine agents were recruited (one eventually dropping out) and divided into two teams. The first, commanded by George John Dasch, included Ernst Peter Burger, Heinrich Heinck, and Richard Quirin; the second, under command of Edward Kerling, included Hermann Neubauer, Werner Thiel, and Herbert Haupt.

On June 12, 1942, the German submarine U-202 landed Dasch's team with explosives and plans at Amagansett, New York.[18] Their mission was to destroy power plants at Niagara Falls and three Aluminum Company of America (ALCOA) factories in Illinois, Tennessee, and New York. However, Dasch instead turned himself in to the FBI, providing them with a complete list of his team members and an account of the planned missions, which led to their arrests.

On June 17, Kerling's team landed from U-584 at Ponte Vedra Beach, 25 miles (40 km) south-east of Jacksonville, Florida. They were ordered to place mines in four areas: the Pennsylvania Railroad in Newark, New Jersey; canal sluices in both St. Louis, Missouri, and Cincinnati, Ohio; and New York City's water supply pipes. The team members made their way to Cincinnati and then split up, two going to Chicago, Illinois, and the others to New York. Dasch's confession led to the arrest of all of the men by July 10.

Because the German agents were captured in civilian clothes (though they had landed in uniforms), they were tried by a military tribunal in Washington D.C., with six of them sentenced to death for spying. President Franklin D. Roosevelt approved the sentences. The constitutionality of military tribunals was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court in Ex parte Quirin on July 31, and the six men were executed by electrocution at the D.C. jail on August 8. Dasch and Burger were given thirty-year prison sentences because they had turned themselves in to the FBI and provided information about the others. Both were released in 1948 and deported to Germany.[19] Dasch (aka George Davis), who had been a longtime American resident before the war, suffered a difficult life in Germany after his return from U.S. custody because he had betrayed his comrades to the U.S. authorities. As a condition of his deportation, he was not permitted to return to the United States, even though he spent many years writing letters to prominent American authorities (J. Edgar Hoover, President Eisenhower, etc.) seeking permission to return. He eventually moved to Switzerland and wrote a book, titled Eight Spies Against America.[20]

Operation Magpie Edit

In 1944 another attempt at infiltration was made, codenamed Operation Elster ("Magpie"). Elster involved Erich Gimpel and German-American defector William Colepaugh. Their mission's objective was to gather intelligence on a variety of military subjects and transmit it back to Germany by a radio to be constructed by Gimpel. They sailed from Kiel on U-1230 and landed at Hancock Point, Maine, on November 29, 1944. Both then made their way to New York, but the operation soon collapsed. Colepaugh lost his nerve and turned himself in to the FBI on December 26, confessing the whole plan and naming Gimpel. Gimpel was then arrested four days later in New York. Both men were sentenced to death, but eventually their sentences were commuted. Gimpel spent 10 years in prison, while Colepaugh was released in 1960 and operated a business in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, before he retired to Florida.

Nazi landings in Canada Edit

St. Martins, New Brunswick Edit

One month earlier than the Dasch operation (on May 14, 1942), a solitary Abwehr agent, Marius A. Langbein, was landed by a U-boat (U-213) near St. Martins, New Brunswick, Canada. His mission, codenamed Operation Grete, after the name of the agent's wife, was to observe and report shipping movements at Montreal and Halifax, Nova Scotia (the main departure port for North Atlantic convoys). Langbein, who had lived in Canada before the war, changed his mind and moved to Ottawa, where he lived off his Abwehr funds until he surrendered to the Canadian authorities in December 1944. A jury found Langbein not guilty of spying, since he had never committed any hostile acts against Canada during the war.[21][22]

New Carlisle, Quebec Edit

 
RCMP booking photo of Janowski

In November 1942, U-518 sank two iron ore freighters and damaged another off Bell Island in Conception Bay, Newfoundland, en route to the Gaspé Peninsula where, despite an attack by a Royal Canadian Air Force aircraft, it successfully landed a spy, Werner von Janowski, four miles (6.5 km) from New Carlisle, Quebec, at around 5am on November 9, 1942.[23]

Von Janowski showed up at the New Carlisle Hotel at 06:30 and checked in under the alias of William Brenton. The son of the hotel owner, Earle Annett Jr., grew suspicious of him, because of inconsistencies with the German spy's story. He used an out-of-circulation Canadian note when paying his bill to the owner's son and when he left to wait at the train station the suspicious son of the hotelier followed him. There Annett grew more suspicious and he alerted a Quebec Provincial Police constable, Alfonse Duchesneau, who quickly boarded the train as it pulled away from the station and began searching for the stranger. Duchesneau located von Janowski, who said he was a radio salesman from Toronto. He stuck with this story until the policeman asked to search his bags; the stranger then confessed: "That will not be necessary. I am a German officer who serves his country as you do yourself."[24][25] Inspection of von Janowski's personal effects upon his arrest revealed that he was carrying a powerful radio transmitter, among other things.

Von Janowski spent the next year as a double agent, codenamed WATCHDOG by the Allies and Bobbi by the Abwehr, sending false messages to Germany under the joint control of the RCMP and MI5, with spymaster Cyril Mills having been seconded to Canada to assist in the double cross initiative.[26] The effectiveness and honesty of his "turn" is a matter of some dispute. For example, John Cecil Masterman wrote in The Double Cross System: "In November, WATCHDOG was landed from a U-boat in Canada together with a wireless set and an extensive questionnaire. This move on the part of the Germans threatened an extension of our activities to other parts of the world, but in fact the case did not develop very satisfactorily... WATCHDOG was closed down in the summer [of 1943]."[27]

German landings in Newfoundland Edit

 
Type IXC/40 submarine U-537 at anchor in Martin Bay, Labrador

Weather Station Kurt, Martin Bay Edit

Accurate weather reporting was important to the sea war and on September 18, 1943, U-537 sailed from Kiel, via Bergen, Norway, with a meteorological team led by Professor Kurt Sommermeyer. They landed at Martin Bay, a remote location near the northern tip of Labrador on October 22, 1943, and successfully set up an automatic weather station ("Weather Station Kurt" or "Wetter-Funkgerät Land-26"), despite the constant risk of Allied air patrols.[28] The station was powered by batteries that were expected to last about three months.[29] At the beginning of July 1944, U-867 left Bergen to replace the equipment, but was sunk en route.[28] The weather station remained at the site until it was recovered in the 1980s and placed in the Canadian War Museum.

U-boat operations Edit

Atlantic Ocean Edit

The Atlantic Ocean was a major strategic battle zone (the "Battle of the Atlantic") and when Germany declared war on the U.S., the East Coast of the United States offered easy pickings for German U-boats (referred to as the "Second Happy Time"). After a highly successful foray by five Type IX long-range U-boats, the offensive was maximized by the use of short-range Type VII U-boats, with increased fuel stores, replenished from supply U-boats called Milchkühe (milk cows). From February to May 1942, 348 ships were sunk, for the loss of two U-boats during April and May. U.S. naval commanders were reluctant to introduce the convoy system that had protected trans-Atlantic shipping[clarification needed] and, without coastal blackouts, shipping was silhouetted against the bright lights of American towns and cities such as Atlantic City until a dim-out was ordered in May.[30]

The cumulative effect of this campaign was severe; a quarter of all wartime sinkings – 3.1 million tons. There were several reasons for this. The American naval commander, Admiral Ernest King, as an apparent anglophobe, was averse to taking British recommendations to introduce convoys,[31] U.S. Coast Guard and Navy patrols were predictable and could be avoided by U-boats, inter-service co-operation was poor, and the U.S. Navy did not possess enough suitable escort vessels (British and Canadian warships were transferred to the U.S. east coast).

U.S. East Coast Edit

Several ships were torpedoed within sight of East Coast cities such as New York and Boston. The only documented World War II sinking of a U-boat close to New England shores occurred on May 5, 1945, when the German submarine U-853 torpedoed and sank the collier Black Point off Newport, Rhode Island. When Black Point was hit, the U.S. Navy immediately chased down the sub and began dropping depth charges. In recent years, U-853 has become a popular dive site. Its intact hull, with open hatches, is located in 130 feet (40 m) of water off Block Island, Rhode Island.[32] A wreck discovered in 1991 off the New Jersey coast was concluded in 1997 to be that of U-869. Previously, U-869 had been thought to have been sunk off Rabat, Morocco.[33]

U.S. Gulf of Mexico Edit

Once convoys and air cover were introduced in the Atlantic, sinking numbers were reduced and the U-boats shifted to attack shipping in the Gulf of Mexico. During 1942 and 1943, more than 20 U-boats operated in the Gulf of Mexico. They attacked tankers transporting oil from ports in Texas and Louisiana, successfully sinking 56 vessels. By the end of 1943, the U-boat attacks diminished as the merchant ships began to travel in armed convoys.[34]

In one instance, the tanker Virginia was torpedoed in the mouth of the Mississippi River by the German submarine U-507 on May 12, 1942, killing 26 crewmen. There were 14 survivors. Again, when defensive measures were introduced, ship sinkings decreased.

U-166 was the only U-boat sunk in the Gulf of Mexico during the war. Once thought to have been sunk by a torpedo dropped from a U.S. Coast Guard Utility Amphibian J4F aircraft on August 1, 1942, U-166 is now believed to have been sunk two days earlier by depth charges from the passenger ship SS Robert E. Lee's naval escort, the U.S. Navy sub-chaser, PC-566. It is thought that the J4F aircraft may have spotted and attacked another German submarine, U-171, which was operating in the area at the same time. U-166 lies in 5,000 feet (1,500 m) of water within a mile (1,600 m) of her last victim, Robert E. Lee.[34]

Canada Edit

From the start of the war in 1939 until VE Day, several of Canada's Atlantic coast ports became important to the resupply effort for the United Kingdom and later for the Allied land offensive on the Western Front. Halifax and Sydney, Nova Scotia, became the primary convoy assembly ports, with Halifax being assigned the fast or priority convoys (largely troops and essential material) with the more modern merchant ships, while Sydney was given slow convoys which conveyed bulkier material on older and more vulnerable merchant ships. Both ports were heavily fortified with shore radar emplacements, searchlight batteries, and extensive coastal artillery stations all manned by RCN and Canadian Army regular and reserve personnel. Military intelligence agents enforced strict blackouts throughout the areas and anti-torpedo nets were in place at the harbor entrances, making a direct attack on those facilities unfeasible because it was impossible for Germany to provide air support. Even though no landings of German personnel took place near these ports, there were frequent attacks by U-boats on convoys departing for Europe once these had reached the mouth of the St. Lawrence. Less extensively used, but no less important, was the port of Saint John which also saw matériel funneled through the port, largely after the United States entered the war in December 1941. The port's location within the protected waters of the Bay of Fundy made it a difficult target for attack. The Canadian Pacific Railway mainline from central Canada (which crossed the state of Maine) could be used to transport in aid of the war effort.

Although not crippling to the Canadian war effort, given the country's rail network to the east coast ports, but possibly more destructive to the morale of the Canadian public, was the Battle of the St. Lawrence, when U-boats began to venture upriver and attack domestic coastal shipping along Canada's east coast in the St. Lawrence River and Gulf of St. Lawrence from early 1942 through to the end of the shipping season in late 1944. From a German perspective this area contained most of the military assets in North America that could realistically be targeted for attack, and therefore the St. Lawrence was the only zone that saw consistent warfare—albeit on a limited scale—in North America during World War II. Residents along the Gaspé coast and the St. Lawrence River and Gulf of St. Lawrence were startled at the sight of maritime warfare off their shores, with ships on fire and explosions rattling their communities, while bodies and debris floated ashore. The number of military losses is not known, although loose estimates can be made based on the number of surface units and submarines sunk.

Newfoundland Edit

Five significant attacks on Newfoundland took place in 1942. On 3 March 1942, U-587 launched three torpedoes at St. John's; one hit Fort Amherst and two more hit the cliffs of Signal Hill below Cabot Tower. In autumn German U-boats attacked four iron ore carriers serving the DOSCO iron mine at Wabana on Bell Island in Newfoundland's Conception Bay. The ships SS Saganaga and SS Lord Strathcona were sunk by U-513 on 5 September 1942, while SS Rose Castle and P.L.M 27 were sunk by U-518 on 2 November with the loss of 69 lives. After the sinkings the submarine fired a torpedo that missed its target, the 3,000-ton collier Anna T, and struck the DOSCO loading pier and exploded. On 14 October 1942, the Newfoundland Railway ferry SS Caribou was torpedoed by U-69 and sunk in the Cabot Strait south of Port aux Basques. Caribou was carrying 45 crew and 206 civilian and military passengers. One hundred thirty-seven lost their lives, many of them Newfoundlanders. [35] Half a dozen U-boat wrecks lie in waters around Newfoundland and Labrador, destroyed by Canadian patrols.

Caribbean Edit

A German submarine shelled the American Standard Oil refinery at the San Nicolas harbour and the "Arend"/"Eagle" Maatschappij (from the Dutch/British Shell Co.) near the Oranjestad harbour situated on the Island of Aruba (a Dutch colony) and some ships that were near the entrance to Lake Maracaibo on February 16, 1942. Three tankers, including the Venezuelan Monagas, were sunk. A Venezuelan gunboat, General Urdaneta, assisted in rescuing the crews.[36][37]

A German submarine shelled the island of Mona, some 40 miles (64 km) from the main island of Puerto Rico, on March 2.

Central America Edit

Before 1941, the Central American nations had various diplomatic ties with Nazi Germany and the Empire of Japan. After the attack on Pearl Harbor, they declared war on the Axis nations. The Central American nations joined the Allied side, broke diplomatic relations with the Axis nations, and initiated persecutions of German and Italian immigrants.

During the course of the war, several merchant ships were sunk in the Caribbean by German submarines, for example the Tela, a Honduran cargo ship sunk by a U-504 submarine in 1942.[38] This led the country to carry out constant air patrols over the coasts under fear of the approach of more German submarines or the general fear of an attack by Germany. Other Central American cargo ships sunk by U-boats are the Olancho, the Comayagua, and the Bluefields, of Honduran and Nicaraguan origins. Central American volunteers in the United States Army participated in both the European and Asia Pacific theater.

Japanese operations Edit

Aleutian Islands Campaign Edit

 
U.S. Navy propaganda poster from 1942/43 showing a rat representing Imperial Japan and a mousetrap labeled "Army – Navy – Civilian" on a map of Alaska, called "Death-Trap For The Jap"

Before Operation MI could be carried out, the Japanese decided to take the Aleutian Islands. On June 3–4, 1942, Japanese planes from two light carriers Ryūjō and Jun'yō struck the U.S. against the city of Unalaska, Alaska, at Dutch Harbor in the Aleutian Islands. Originally, the Japanese planned to attack Dutch Harbor simultaneously with its attack on Midway, but the Midway attack was delayed by one day. The attack only did moderate damage on Dutch Harbor, but 43 Americans were killed and 50 others wounded in the attack.

On June 6, two days after the bombing of Dutch Harbor, 500 Japanese marines landed on Kiska, one of the Aleutian Islands of Alaska. Upon landing, they killed two and captured eight United States Navy officers, then seized control of American soil for the first time. The next day, a total of 1,140 Japanese infantrymen landed on Attu via Holtz Bay, eventually reaching Massacre Bay and Chichagof Harbor. Attu's population at the time consisted of 45 Alaska Native Aleuts, and two white Americans – Charles Foster Jones, a 60-year-old ham radio operator and weather observer, and his 62-year-old wife Etta, a teacher and nurse. The Japanese killed Charles Jones after interrogating him, while Etta Jones and the Aleut population were sent to Japan, where 16 of the Aleuts died and Etta survived the war.

A year after Japan's occupation of Kiska and Attu, U.S. troops invaded Attu on May 11, 1943 and successfully retook the island after three weeks of fighting, killing 2,351 Japanese combatants and taking only 28 as prisoners of war at the cost of 549 lives. Three months later on August 15, U.S. and Canadian forces landed on Kiska expecting the same resistance like Attu; they later found the entire island empty, as most of the Japanese forces secretly evacuated weeks before the landing. In spite of enemy absence on the island, over 313 Allied casualties were sustained nonetheless through car accidents, booby traps, landmines, and friendly fire, in which 28 Americans and four Canadians were killed in the exchange of fire between the two forces.

Submarine operations Edit

Several ships were torpedoed within sight of West Coast Californian cities such as Los Angeles, Santa Barbara, San Diego, and Santa Monica. During 1941 and 1942, more than 10 Japanese submarines operated in the West Coast and Baja California. They attacked American, Canadian, and Mexican ships, successfully sinking over 10 vessels including the Soviet Navy submarine L-16 on October 11, 1942.

Bombardment of Ellwood Edit

 
Japanese submarine I-17

The continental United States was first shelled by the Axis on February 23, 1942, when the Japanese submarine I-17 attacked the Ellwood Oil Field west of Goleta, near Santa Barbara, California. Although only a pumphouse and catwalk at one oil well were damaged, I-17 Captain Nishino Kozo radioed Tokyo that he had left Santa Barbara in flames. No casualties were reported and the total cost of the damage was officially estimated at approximately $500–1,000.[39] News of the shelling triggered an invasion scare along the West Coast.[40]

Bombardment of Estevan Point Lighthouse Edit

More than five Japanese submarines operated in Western Canada during 1941 and 1942. On June 20, 1942, the Japanese submarine I-26, under the command of Yokota Minoru,[41] fired 25–30 rounds of 5.5-inch shells at the Estevan Point lighthouse on Vancouver Island in British Columbia, but failed to hit its target.[42] Though no casualties were reported, the subsequent decision to turn off the lights of outer stations caused difficulties for coastal shipping activity.[43]

Bombardment of Fort Stevens Edit

In what became the second attack on a continental American military installation during World War II, the Japanese submarine I-25, under the command of Tagami Akiji,[44] surfaced near the mouth of the Columbia River in Oregon on the night of June 21 and June 22, 1942, and fired shells toward Fort Stevens. The only damage officially recorded was to a baseball field's backstop. Probably the most significant damage was a shell that damaged some large phone cables. The Fort Stevens gunners were refused permission to return fire for fear of revealing the guns' location and/or range limitations to the sub. American aircraft on training flights spotted the submarine, which was subsequently attacked by a U.S. bomber, but escaped.

Lookout Air Raids Edit

 
Nobuo Fujita standing by his E14Y

The Lookout Air Raids occurred on September 9, 1942. The second location to be subject to aerial bombing in the continental United States by a foreign power occurred when an attempt to start a forest fire was made by a Japanese Yokosuka E14Y1 "Glen" seaplane dropping two 80 kg (180 lb) incendiary bombs over Mount Emily, near Brookings, Oregon.

The seaplane, piloted by Nobuo Fujita, had been launched from the Japanese submarine aircraft carrier I-25. No significant damage was officially reported following the attack, nor after a repeat attempt on September 29.

Fire balloon attacks Edit

 
Mitchell Monument

Between November 1944 and April 1945, the Japanese Navy launched over 9,000 fire balloons toward North America. Carried by the recently discovered Pacific jet stream, they were to sail over the Pacific Ocean and land in North America, where the Japanese hoped they would start forest fires and cause other damage. About three hundred were reported as reaching North America, but little damage was caused.

Near Bly, Oregon, six people (five children and a woman) became the only deaths due to an enemy balloon bomb attack in the United States when a balloon bomb exploded.[45] The site is marked by a stone monument at the Mitchell Recreation Area in the Fremont-Winema National Forest.

A fire balloon is also considered to be a possible cause of the third fire in the Tillamook Burn in Oregon. One member of the 555th Parachute Infantry Battalion died while responding to a fire in the Umpqua National Forest near Roseburg, Oregon, on August 6, 1945; other casualties of the 555th were two fractures and 20 other injuries.

Cancelled Axis operations Edit

Germany Edit

In 1940, the German Air Ministry secretly requested designs from the major German aircraft companies for its Amerikabomber program, in which a long-range strategic bomber would strike the continental United States from the Azores (more than 2,200 miles (3,500 km) away). Planning was complete in 1942 with the submittal of the program to Goering's RLM offices in March 1942, resulting in cogent piston-engined designs from Focke-Wulf, Heinkel, Junkers and Messerschmitt (who had built the ultra-long-range Messerschmitt Me 261 before WW II), but by mid-1944 the project had been abandoned as too expensive, with a serious increase in the need for defensive fighters, needing to come from Nazi Germany's by-then rapidly diminishing aviation production capacity.

Hitler had ordered that biological warfare should be studied only for the purpose of defending against it. The head of the Science Division of the Wehrmacht, Erich Schumann, lobbied for Hitler to be persuaded otherwise: "America must be attacked simultaneously with various human and animal epidemic pathogens, as well as plant pests." The plans were never adopted because they were opposed by Hitler.[46]

Italy Edit

An Italian naval commander, Junio Valerio Borghese, devised a plan to attack New York harbor with midget submarines; however, as the tides of war changed against Italy, the plan was postponed and later scrapped.[47]

Japan Edit

Just after the attack on Pearl Harbor, a force of seven Japanese submarines patrolled the United States West Coast. The Wolfpack made plans to bombard targets in California on Christmas Eve or Christmas Day of 1941. However, the attack was postponed to December 27 in order to avoid attacking during the Christian festival and offending German and Italian allies. Eventually the plan was canceled altogether for fears of American reprisal. In 1946, an unexploded Japanese torpedo was found near the Golden Gate Bridge, and it has been interpreted as evidence of an attack, potentially targeting the bridge itself, in late December of 1941.[48]

The Japanese constructed a plan early in the Pacific War to attack the Panama Canal, a vital water passage in Panama, used during World War II primarily for the Allied supply effort. The Japanese attack was never launched because Japan suffered crippling naval losses at the beginning of conflict with the United States and United Kingdom (See: Aichi M6A).

The Imperial Japanese Army launched Project Z (also called the Z Bombers Project) in 1942, similar to the Nazi German Amerika Bomber project, to design an intercontinental bomber capable of reaching North America. The Project Z plane was to have six engines of 5,000 horsepower each; the Nakajima Aircraft Company quickly began developing engines for the plane, and proposed doubling HA-44 engines (the most powerful engine available in Japan) into a 36-cylinder engine.[49] Designs were presented to the Imperial Japanese Army, including the Nakajima G10N, Kawasaki Ki-91, and Nakajima G5N. None developed beyond prototypes or wind tunnel models, save for the G5N. In 1945, the Z project and other heavy bomber projects were cancelled.

During the final months of World War II, Japan had planned to use bubonic plague as a biological weapon against U.S. civilians in San Diego, California, during Operation Cherry Blossoms at Night. The plan was set to launch at night on September 22, 1945. However, it was shelved because Japan surrendered on August 15, 1945.[50][51][52]

Other alarms Edit

False alarms Edit

These false alarms have generally been attributed to military and civilian inexperience with war and poor radars of the era. Critics have theorized they were a deliberate attempt by the Army to frighten the public in order to stimulate interest in war preparations.[53]

Alerts following Pearl Harbor Edit

On December 8, 1941, "rumors of an enemy carrier off the coast led to the closing of schools in Oakland, California," a blackout enforced by local wardens and radio silence followed that evening.[53] The reports reaching Washington of an attack on San Francisco were regarded as credible.[53] The affair was described as a test but Lt. Gen. John L. DeWitt of the Western Defense Command said "Last night there were planes over this community. They were enemy planes! I mean Japanese planes! And they were tracked out to sea. You think it was a hoax? It is damned nonsense for sensible people to assume that the Army and Navy would practice such a hoax on San Francisco."[53] Rumors continued on the West Coast in the following days. An alert of a similar nature occurred in the Northeast on December 9.[53] "At noon advices were received that hostile planes were only two hours' distance away."[53] Although there was no general hysteria, fighter aircraft from Mitchel Field on Long Island took the air to intercept the "raiders". Wall Street had its worst sell off since the Fall of France, school children in New York City were sent home and several radio stations left the air.[53] In Boston police shifted heavy stores of guns and ammunition from storage vaults to stations throughout the city, and industrial establishments were advised to prepare for a raid.[53]

Battle of Los Angeles Edit

The Battle of Los Angeles, also known as "The Great Los Angeles Air Raid", is the name given by contemporary sources to the imaginary enemy attack and subsequent anti-aircraft artillery barrage which took place in 1942 from February 24 and early on February 25 over Los Angeles, California.[54][55] Initially, the target of the aerial barrage was thought to be an attacking force from Japan, but Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox speaking at a press conference shortly afterward called the incident a "false alarm." Newspapers of the time published a number of sensational reports and speculations of a cover-up to conceal an actual invasion by enemy airplanes. When documenting the incident in 1983, the U.S. Office of Air Force History attributed the event to a case of "war nerves" likely triggered by a lost weather balloon and exacerbated by stray flares and shell bursts from adjoining batteries.[56][57]

Minor alerts Edit

1942 Edit

In May and June the San Francisco Bay Area underwent a series of alerts:

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-01-09. Retrieved 2011-05-23.
  2. ^ O'Hara 2004, pp. 7–9
  3. ^ Carey 2004, p. 9-10.
  4. ^ a b Carey 2004.
  5. ^ Morison 1947, p. 376
  6. ^ Morison 1947, p. 386
  7. ^ Votaw, 1950, p. 10579ff, and 1951, p.93.
  8. ^ Maximiano & Neto 2011, p. 6
  9. ^ Gastaldoni, Ivo. A última guerra romântica: Memórias de um piloto de patrulha (The last romantic war: Memoirs of a maritime patrol aviator) (in Portuguese) Incaer, Rio de Janeiro (1993) ISBN 8585987138 From p.153.
  10. ^ a b Helgason, Guðmundur. "Loss listings". German U-boats of WWII - uboat.net. Retrieved 4 July 2015.
  11. ^ Carey 2004, p. 119.
  12. ^ Barone 2013, Chapter 2
  13. ^ Carey 2004, p. 100.
  14. ^ Carruthers 2011, p. 190
  15. ^ Wood, Clement (1932), The Man Who Killed Kitchener: The Life of Fritz Joubert Duquesne, New York: William Faro, inc
  16. ^ "Duquesne Spy Ring".
  17. ^ (Including Canada, the Germans not distinguishing between the overseas enemy; see Beebe 1996)
  18. ^ Jonathan Wallace, Military Tribunals, spectacle.org, from the original on 12 November 2007, retrieved 2007-12-09
  19. ^ , uboatwar.net, archived from the original on 2005-11-04, retrieved 2007-12-09 (from internet archive)
  20. ^ W. A. Swanberg (April 1970), , American Heritage, vol. 21, no. 3, archived from the original on 2007-12-26, retrieved 2007-12-09
  21. ^ http://www.german-navy.de/kriegsmarine/articles/feature2.html Kriegsmarine article
  22. ^ The most thorough treatment to date is probably Dean Beeby, Cargo of Lies: The True Story of a Nazi Double Agent in Canada, University of Toronto Press, 1996, pp. 140–166 (Chapter 7)
  23. ^ See Michael Hadley (1985), U-Boats Against Canada, McGill Queens University Press, 1985, pp. 149–162; and Beebe 1996.
  24. ^ Turbide, Sophie. "Werner Alfred Waldemar von Janowski: New Carlisle's Spy". Gaspesian Heritage WebMagazine. Retrieved 19 April 2020.
  25. ^ Essex, James W. 2004. Victory in the St. Lawrence: The Unknown U-Boat War. Erin, Ontario: Boston Mills Press
  26. ^ See Beebe 1996
  27. ^ Cecil Masterman, The Double Cross System, New Haven: Yale University Press, 1972, p. 121, 144
  28. ^ a b Michael L. Hadley (1990), "Chapter five, The Intelligenc Gatherers: Langbein, Janow and Kurt", U-Boats Against Canada: German Submarines in Canadian Waters, McGill-Queen's Press – MQUP, pp. 144–167, ISBN 978-0-7735-0801-9
  29. ^ Kissell, Joe (24 August 2018), Weather Station Kurt, itod.com
  30. ^ Leckie, Robert (1964), The Story of World War II, New York: Random House, p. 100
  31. ^ Gannon, Michael (1990). Operation Drumbeat. Harper. pp. 388–389 & 414–415. ISBN 0-06-092088-2.
  32. ^ Michael Salvarezza; Christopher Weaver, On Final Attack, The Story of the U853, ecophotoexplorers.com, from the original on 1 December 2007, retrieved 2007-12-09
  33. ^ "Hitler's Lost Sub", Nova (Transcript), PBS, November 14, 2000, from the original on 24 December 2008, retrieved 2008-12-01.
  34. ^ a b Minerals Management Service, Gulf of Mexico Region, World War II Shipwrecks, U.S. Department of the Interior, from the original on 17 October 2008, retrieved 2008-11-02
  35. ^ Pollock, Jeffrey C. (2019). "Great Mining Camps of Canada 6. Geology and History of the Wabana Iron Mines, Bell Island, Newfoundland". Geoscience Canada. 46 (2): 69–83. doi:10.12789/geocanj.2019.46.148. S2CID 199104273. Retrieved 14 May 2023.
  36. ^ , Time, February 23, 1942, archived from the original on 10 December 2007, retrieved 2007-12-09
  37. ^ Schenia, Robert L. (1987), Latin America: A Naval History 1810–1987, Annapolis, Maryland, United States: Naval Institute Press, ISBN 0-87021-295-8, OCLC 15696006
  38. ^ "Tela (Honduras Steam merchant) - Ships hit by German U-boats during WWII - uboat.net". uboat.net. Retrieved 2021-04-28.
  39. ^ , The California State Military Museum, archived from the original on 5 January 2008, retrieved 2007-12-09
  40. ^ Young, Donald J. Phantom Japanese Raid on Los Angeles 2008-01-24 at the Wayback Machine World War II, September 2003
  41. ^ Sensuikan! — HIJMS Submarine I-26: Tabular Record of Movement, combinedfleet.com, retrieved 2007-12-09
  42. ^ Conn, Stetson; Engelman, Rose C.; Fairchild, Byron (2000) [1964], "The Continental Defense Commands After Pearl Harbor", Guarding the United States and its Outposts, United States Army Center of Military History, CMH Pub 4-2, from the original on 25 December 2007, retrieved 2007-12-09
  43. ^ , pinetreeline.org, archived from the original on 2008-07-08, retrieved 2007-12-09
  44. ^ Sensuikan! — HIJMS Submarine I-25: Tabular Record of Movement, combinedfleet.com, retrieved 2007-12-09
  45. ^ Kravets, David (May 5, 2010). "May 5, 1945: Japanese Balloon Bomb Kills 6 in Oregon". Wired.com. Retrieved 4 October 2010.
  46. ^ Biologists Under Hitler Ute Deichmann, Thomas Dunlap Harvard University Press 1999, pages 279–282
  47. ^ Christiano D'Adamo. "Operations". Regia Marina Italiana.
  48. ^ Golden Gate Torpedo Attack - Japanese Assault on San Francisco 1941, archived from the original on 2021-11-14, retrieved 2021-09-17
  49. ^ Horn, Steve (2005), The Second Attack on Pearl Harbor: Operation K and Other Japanese Attempts to Bomb America in World War II, Naval Institute Press, p. 265, ISBN 978-1-59114-388-8
  50. ^ "Plague (Yersinia Pestis)". Weapons of Mass Destruction. GlobalSecurity.org.
  51. ^ Amy Stewart (April 25, 2011). "Where To Find The World's Most 'Wicked Bugs': Fleas". National Public Radio.
  52. ^ Russell Working (June 5, 2001). "The trial of Unit 731". The Japan Times.
  53. ^ a b c d e f g h . www.sfmuseum.net. Archived from the original on 2011-11-20. Retrieved 2010-09-08.
  54. ^ Caughey, John; Caughey, LaRee (1977), Los Angeles: biography of a city, University of California Press, p. 364, ISBN 978-0-520-03410-5
  55. ^ Farley, John E. (1998), Earthquake fears, predictions, and preparations in mid-America, Southern Illinois University Press, p. 14, ISBN 978-0-8093-2201-5
  56. ^ California and the Second World War; The Battle of Los Angeles, The California State Military Museum, from the original on 18 December 2007, retrieved 2007-12-09
  57. ^ , Virtual Museum of the City of San Francisco, archived from the original on 2007-09-28, retrieved 2007-12-09

Works cited Edit

  • Barone, João (2013). 1942: O Brasil e sua guerra quase desconhecida [1942: Brazil and its almost Forgotten War] (in Portuguese). Rio de Janeiro. ISBN 978-85-209-3394-7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Beebe, Dean (1996). Cargo of Lies: The True Story of a Nazi Double Agent in Canada. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0-8020-0731-7.
  • Carey, Alan C. (2004). Galloping Ghosts of the Brazilian Coast. Lincoln, NE USA: iUniverse, Inc. ISBN 978-0-595-31527-7.
  • Carruthers, Bob (2011). The U-Boat War in the Atlantic: Volume III: 1944–1945. Coda Books. ISBN 978-1-78159-161-1.
  • Maximiano, Cesar Campiani; Neto, Ricardo Bonalume (2011). Brazilian Expeditionary Force in World War II. Long Island City: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84908-483-3.
  • Morison, Samuel Eliot. (1947). History of United States Naval Operations in World War II: The Battle of the Atlantic; September 1939 – May 1943. Boston: Little Brown. ISBN 978-0-252-06963-5. Retrieved 8 November 2017.
  • O'Hara, Vincent (2004). The German fleet at war, 1939–1945. Naval Institute Press.
  • Votaw, Homer C. (1950–51). The Brazilian Navy in World War II. US Government Printing Office; Congressional Record: Proceedings and Debates of US Congress, Volume 96, Part 8.Senate and Military Review, Volume XXX, Number X.

Further reading Edit

  • Dobbs, Michael. Saboteurs: The Nazi Raid on America ISBN 0-375-41470-3 (2004)
  • Duffy, J.P. Target: America: Hitler's Plan to Attack the United States, Praeger Publishers; PB: The Lyons Press ISBN 0275966844 (A Booklist review)
  • Gimpel, Erich. Agent 146: The True Story of a Nazi Spy in America ISBN 0-312-30797-7 (2003)
  • Griehl, Manfred. Luftwaffe over America: The Secret Plans to Bomb the United States in World War II ISBN 1-85367-608-X (2004)
  • Hadley, Michael (1985). U-Boats Against Canada: German Submarines in Canadian Waters. McGill Queens University Press. ISBN 0-7735-0801-5.
  • Horn, Steve (2005), The Second Attack on Pearl Harbor: Operation K And Other Japanese Attempts to Bomb America in World War II, Naval Institute Press, ISBN 1-59114-388-8
  • Mikesh, Robert C. Japan's World War II Balloon Bomb Attacks on North America, Smithsonian Institution Press, (1973)
  • Kesich, Gregory D. (April 13, 2003), , Portland Press Herald, archived from the original on 2007-09-22, retrieved 2007-12-09
  • O'Donnell, Pierce, In Time of War: Hitler's Terrorist Attack on America (Operation Pastorius), The New Press, 2005 ISBN 978-1-56584-958-7
  • Webber, Bert. Silent Siege: Japanese Attacks Against North America in World War II, Ye Galleon Press, Fairfield, Washington (1984). ISBN 0-87770-315-9 (hardcover). ISBN 0-87770-318-3 (paperbound).

External links Edit

  • History.army.mil: Defense of Americas 2012-09-26 at the Wayback Machine — publication of the United States Army Center of Military History.
  • History.army.mil: American Theater Army Responses 2007-12-25 at the Wayback Machine
  • Military.com: American Theater targets
  • History.navy.mil: German Sabotage operations
  • Regiamarina.net: "Planned Italian attack on New York harbor"
  • German-navy.de: Details of the German secret agents that landed in North America
  • – feature documentary about the World War II Battle of Attu in the Aleutians.
  • Uboat.net: The Battle of the St. Lawrence

american, theater, world, stage, theater, united, states, during, this, period, theater, united, states, during, wwii, american, theater, theater, operations, during, world, including, continental, american, territory, extending, miles, into, ocean, american, . For stage theater in the United States during this period see Theater in the United States during WWII The American Theater 1 was a theater of operations during World War II including all continental American territory and extending 200 miles 320 km into the ocean American TheaterPart of World War IIA United States Coast Guardsman on sentry duty in Alaska during World War IIDate1939 1945LocationAmericas Atlantic Ocean Pacific OceanResultAllied victory Axis objectives failed or did not affect the outcome of the conflict BelligerentsAllies United States Canada United Kingdom Brazil Mexico Cuba Dominican Republic Haiti Peru Ecuador Bolivia Paraguay Panama Colombia Venezuela Nicaragua Costa Rica El Salvador Honduras Guatemala Chile from 1945 Argentina from 1945 Uruguay from 1945 Axis Germany Japan Italy Owing to North and South America s geographical separation from the central theaters of conflict in Europe the Mediterranean and Middle East and the Pacific the threat of an invasion of the continental U S or other areas in the Americas by the Axis Powers was negligible and the theater saw relatively little conflict Military engagements include the Battle of the River Plate submarine attacks off the East Coast the Aleutian Islands campaign the Battle of the St Lawrence and the attacks on Newfoundland Espionage efforts included Operation Bolivar Contents 1 German operations 1 1 South America 1 1 1 Battle of the River Plate 1 1 2 Submarine warfare 1 2 United States 1 2 1 Duquesne Spy Ring 1 2 2 Operation Pastorius 1 2 3 Operation Magpie 1 3 Nazi landings in Canada 1 3 1 St Martins New Brunswick 1 3 2 New Carlisle Quebec 1 4 German landings in Newfoundland 1 4 1 Weather Station Kurt Martin Bay 1 5 U boat operations 1 5 1 Atlantic Ocean 1 5 2 U S East Coast 1 5 3 U S Gulf of Mexico 1 5 4 Canada 1 5 5 Newfoundland 1 5 6 Caribbean 1 5 7 Central America 2 Japanese operations 2 1 Aleutian Islands Campaign 2 2 Submarine operations 2 2 1 Bombardment of Ellwood 2 2 2 Bombardment of Estevan Point Lighthouse 2 2 3 Bombardment of Fort Stevens 2 3 Lookout Air Raids 2 4 Fire balloon attacks 3 Cancelled Axis operations 3 1 Germany 3 2 Italy 3 3 Japan 4 Other alarms 4 1 False alarms 4 1 1 Alerts following Pearl Harbor 4 1 2 Battle of Los Angeles 4 2 Minor alerts 4 2 1 1942 5 See also 6 Notes 6 1 Works cited 7 Further reading 8 External linksGerman operations EditSouth America Edit Admiral Graf Spee burning and sinking off MontevideoSee also Latin America during World War II Battle of the River Plate Edit Main article Battle of the River Plate The first naval battle during the war was fought on December 13 1939 off the Atlantic coast of South America The German pocket battleship Admiral Graf Spee acting as a commerce raider encountered one of the British naval units searching for her Composed of three Royal Navy cruisers HMS Exeter Ajax and Achilles the unit was patrolling off the River Plate estuary of Argentina and Uruguay In a bloody engagement Admiral Graf Spee successfully repulsed the British attacks Captain Hans Langsdorff then brought his damaged ship to shelter in neutral Uruguay for repairs However British intelligence successfully deceived Langsdorff into believing that a much superior British force had now gathered to wait for him and he scuttled his ship at Montevideo to save his crew s lives before committing suicide German combat losses were 96 killed or wounded against 72 British sailors killed and 28 wounded Two Royal Navy cruisers had been severely damaged 2 Submarine warfare Edit Main article Battle of the Atlantic U 199 under attack by Brazilian Air Force PBY Catalina 31 July 1943 U boat operations in the region centered in the Atlantic Narrows between Brazil and West Africa began in autumn 1940 After negotiations with Brazilian Foreign Minister Osvaldo Aranha on behalf of dictator Getulio Vargas the U S introduced its Air Force along Brazil s coast in the second half of 1941 Germany and Italy subsequently extended their submarine attacks to include Brazilian ships wherever they were and from April 1942 were found in Brazilian waters 3 On 22 May 1942 the first Brazilian attack although unsuccessful was carried out by Brazilian Air Force aircraft on the Italian submarine Barbarigo 4 After a series of attacks on merchant vessels off the Brazilian coast by U 507 4 Brazil officially entered the war on 22 August 1942 offering an important addition to the Allied strategic position in the South Atlantic 5 Although the Brazilian Navy was small it had modern minelayers suitable for coastal convoy escort and aircraft which needed only small modifications to become suitable for maritime patrol 6 During its three years of war mainly in Caribbean and South Atlantic alone and in conjunction with the U S Brazil escorted 3 167 ships in 614 convoys totalling 16 500 000 tons with losses of 0 1 7 Brazil saw three of its warships sunk and 486 men killed in action 332 in the cruiser Bahia 972 seamen and civilian passengers were also lost aboard the 32 Brazilian merchant vessels attacked by enemy submarines 8 American and Brazilian air and naval forces worked closely together until the end of the Battle One example was the sinking of U 199 in July 1943 by a coordinated action of Brazilian and American aircraft 9 10 Only in Brazilian waters eleven other Axis submarines were known sunk between January and September 1943 the Italian Archimede and ten German boats U 128 U 161 U 164 U 507 U 513 U 590 U 591 U 598 U 604 and U 662 10 11 12 By late 1943 the decreasing number of Allied shipping losses in South Atlantic coincided with the increasing elimination of Axis submarines operating there 13 From then the battle in the region was lost for Germans even with the most of remaining submarines in the region receiving official order of withdrawal only in August of the following year and with Baron Jedburgh the last Allied merchant ship sunk by a U boat U 532 there on 10 March 1945 14 United States Edit Duquesne Spy Ring Edit Main article Duquesne Spy Ring Fritz Joubert Duquesne FBI file photoEven before the war a large Nazi spy ring was found operating in the United States As of 2023 the Duquesne Spy Ring is still the largest espionage case in United States history that ended in convictions The 33 German agents who formed the Duquesne spy ring were placed in key jobs in the United States to get information that could be used in the event of war and to carry out acts of sabotage One man opened a restaurant and used his position to get information from his customers another worked at an airline so he could report Allied ships crossing the Atlantic Ocean others in the ring worked as deliverymen so they could deliver secret messages alongside normal messages The ring was led by Captain Fritz Joubert Duquesne a South African Boer who spied for Germany in both World Wars and is best known as The man who killed Kitchener after he was awarded the Iron Cross for his key role in the sabotage and sinking of HMS Hampshire in 1916 15 William G Sebold a double agent for the United States was a major factor in the FBI s successful resolution of this case For nearly two years Sebold ran a secret radio station in New York for the ring Sebold provided the FBI with information on what Germany was sending to its spies in the United States while allowing the FBI to control the information that was being transmitted to Germany On June 29 1941 six months before the U S declared war the FBI acted All 33 spies were arrested found or pled guilty and sentenced to serve a total of over 300 years in prison 16 Operation Pastorius Edit Main article Operation Pastorius After declaring war on the United States following the attack on Pearl Harbor Adolf Hitler ordered the remaining German saboteurs to wreak havoc on America 17 The responsibility for carrying this out was given to German Intelligence Abwehr In the spring of 1942 nine agents were recruited one eventually dropping out and divided into two teams The first commanded by George John Dasch included Ernst Peter Burger Heinrich Heinck and Richard Quirin the second under command of Edward Kerling included Hermann Neubauer Werner Thiel and Herbert Haupt On June 12 1942 the German submarine U 202 landed Dasch s team with explosives and plans at Amagansett New York 18 Their mission was to destroy power plants at Niagara Falls and three Aluminum Company of America ALCOA factories in Illinois Tennessee and New York However Dasch instead turned himself in to the FBI providing them with a complete list of his team members and an account of the planned missions which led to their arrests On June 17 Kerling s team landed from U 584 at Ponte Vedra Beach 25 miles 40 km south east of Jacksonville Florida They were ordered to place mines in four areas the Pennsylvania Railroad in Newark New Jersey canal sluices in both St Louis Missouri and Cincinnati Ohio and New York City s water supply pipes The team members made their way to Cincinnati and then split up two going to Chicago Illinois and the others to New York Dasch s confession led to the arrest of all of the men by July 10 Because the German agents were captured in civilian clothes though they had landed in uniforms they were tried by a military tribunal in Washington D C with six of them sentenced to death for spying President Franklin D Roosevelt approved the sentences The constitutionality of military tribunals was upheld by the U S Supreme Court in Ex parte Quirin on July 31 and the six men were executed by electrocution at the D C jail on August 8 Dasch and Burger were given thirty year prison sentences because they had turned themselves in to the FBI and provided information about the others Both were released in 1948 and deported to Germany 19 Dasch aka George Davis who had been a longtime American resident before the war suffered a difficult life in Germany after his return from U S custody because he had betrayed his comrades to the U S authorities As a condition of his deportation he was not permitted to return to the United States even though he spent many years writing letters to prominent American authorities J Edgar Hoover President Eisenhower etc seeking permission to return He eventually moved to Switzerland and wrote a book titled Eight Spies Against America 20 Operation Magpie Edit Main article Operation Elster In 1944 another attempt at infiltration was made codenamed Operation Elster Magpie Elster involved Erich Gimpel and German American defector William Colepaugh Their mission s objective was to gather intelligence on a variety of military subjects and transmit it back to Germany by a radio to be constructed by Gimpel They sailed from Kiel on U 1230 and landed at Hancock Point Maine on November 29 1944 Both then made their way to New York but the operation soon collapsed Colepaugh lost his nerve and turned himself in to the FBI on December 26 confessing the whole plan and naming Gimpel Gimpel was then arrested four days later in New York Both men were sentenced to death but eventually their sentences were commuted Gimpel spent 10 years in prison while Colepaugh was released in 1960 and operated a business in King of Prussia Pennsylvania before he retired to Florida Nazi landings in Canada Edit St Martins New Brunswick Edit One month earlier than the Dasch operation on May 14 1942 a solitary Abwehr agent Marius A Langbein was landed by a U boat U 213 near St Martins New Brunswick Canada His mission codenamed Operation Grete after the name of the agent s wife was to observe and report shipping movements at Montreal and Halifax Nova Scotia the main departure port for North Atlantic convoys Langbein who had lived in Canada before the war changed his mind and moved to Ottawa where he lived off his Abwehr funds until he surrendered to the Canadian authorities in December 1944 A jury found Langbein not guilty of spying since he had never committed any hostile acts against Canada during the war 21 22 New Carlisle Quebec Edit RCMP booking photo of JanowskiIn November 1942 U 518 sank two iron ore freighters and damaged another off Bell Island in Conception Bay Newfoundland en route to the Gaspe Peninsula where despite an attack by a Royal Canadian Air Force aircraft it successfully landed a spy Werner von Janowski four miles 6 5 km from New Carlisle Quebec at around 5am on November 9 1942 23 Von Janowski showed up at the New Carlisle Hotel at 06 30 and checked in under the alias of William Brenton The son of the hotel owner Earle Annett Jr grew suspicious of him because of inconsistencies with the German spy s story He used an out of circulation Canadian note when paying his bill to the owner s son and when he left to wait at the train station the suspicious son of the hotelier followed him There Annett grew more suspicious and he alerted a Quebec Provincial Police constable Alfonse Duchesneau who quickly boarded the train as it pulled away from the station and began searching for the stranger Duchesneau located von Janowski who said he was a radio salesman from Toronto He stuck with this story until the policeman asked to search his bags the stranger then confessed That will not be necessary I am a German officer who serves his country as you do yourself 24 25 Inspection of von Janowski s personal effects upon his arrest revealed that he was carrying a powerful radio transmitter among other things Von Janowski spent the next year as a double agent codenamed WATCHDOG by the Allies and Bobbi by the Abwehr sending false messages to Germany under the joint control of the RCMP and MI5 with spymaster Cyril Mills having been seconded to Canada to assist in the double cross initiative 26 The effectiveness and honesty of his turn is a matter of some dispute For example John Cecil Masterman wrote in The Double Cross System In November WATCHDOG was landed from a U boat in Canada together with a wireless set and an extensive questionnaire This move on the part of the Germans threatened an extension of our activities to other parts of the world but in fact the case did not develop very satisfactorily WATCHDOG was closed down in the summer of 1943 27 German landings in Newfoundland Edit Type IXC 40 submarine U 537 at anchor in Martin Bay LabradorWeather Station Kurt Martin Bay Edit Accurate weather reporting was important to the sea war and on September 18 1943 U 537 sailed from Kiel via Bergen Norway with a meteorological team led by Professor Kurt Sommermeyer They landed at Martin Bay a remote location near the northern tip of Labrador on October 22 1943 and successfully set up an automatic weather station Weather Station Kurt or Wetter Funkgerat Land 26 despite the constant risk of Allied air patrols 28 The station was powered by batteries that were expected to last about three months 29 At the beginning of July 1944 U 867 left Bergen to replace the equipment but was sunk en route 28 The weather station remained at the site until it was recovered in the 1980s and placed in the Canadian War Museum U boat operations Edit Atlantic Ocean Edit See also Seacoast defense in the United States World War II The Atlantic Ocean was a major strategic battle zone the Battle of the Atlantic and when Germany declared war on the U S the East Coast of the United States offered easy pickings for German U boats referred to as the Second Happy Time After a highly successful foray by five Type IX long range U boats the offensive was maximized by the use of short range Type VII U boats with increased fuel stores replenished from supply U boats called Milchkuhe milk cows From February to May 1942 348 ships were sunk for the loss of two U boats during April and May U S naval commanders were reluctant to introduce the convoy system that had protected trans Atlantic shipping clarification needed and without coastal blackouts shipping was silhouetted against the bright lights of American towns and cities such as Atlantic City until a dim out was ordered in May 30 The cumulative effect of this campaign was severe a quarter of all wartime sinkings 3 1 million tons There were several reasons for this The American naval commander Admiral Ernest King as an apparent anglophobe was averse to taking British recommendations to introduce convoys 31 U S Coast Guard and Navy patrols were predictable and could be avoided by U boats inter service co operation was poor and the U S Navy did not possess enough suitable escort vessels British and Canadian warships were transferred to the U S east coast U S East Coast Edit See also Torpedo Alley Several ships were torpedoed within sight of East Coast cities such as New York and Boston The only documented World War II sinking of a U boat close to New England shores occurred on May 5 1945 when the German submarine U 853 torpedoed and sank the collier Black Point off Newport Rhode Island When Black Point was hit the U S Navy immediately chased down the sub and began dropping depth charges In recent years U 853 has become a popular dive site Its intact hull with open hatches is located in 130 feet 40 m of water off Block Island Rhode Island 32 A wreck discovered in 1991 off the New Jersey coast was concluded in 1997 to be that of U 869 Previously U 869 had been thought to have been sunk off Rabat Morocco 33 U S Gulf of Mexico Edit Once convoys and air cover were introduced in the Atlantic sinking numbers were reduced and the U boats shifted to attack shipping in the Gulf of Mexico During 1942 and 1943 more than 20 U boats operated in the Gulf of Mexico They attacked tankers transporting oil from ports in Texas and Louisiana successfully sinking 56 vessels By the end of 1943 the U boat attacks diminished as the merchant ships began to travel in armed convoys 34 In one instance the tanker Virginia was torpedoed in the mouth of the Mississippi River by the German submarine U 507 on May 12 1942 killing 26 crewmen There were 14 survivors Again when defensive measures were introduced ship sinkings decreased U 166 was the only U boat sunk in the Gulf of Mexico during the war Once thought to have been sunk by a torpedo dropped from a U S Coast Guard Utility Amphibian J4F aircraft on August 1 1942 U 166 is now believed to have been sunk two days earlier by depth charges from the passenger ship SS Robert E Lee s naval escort the U S Navy sub chaser PC 566 It is thought that the J4F aircraft may have spotted and attacked another German submarine U 171 which was operating in the area at the same time U 166 lies in 5 000 feet 1 500 m of water within a mile 1 600 m of her last victim Robert E Lee 34 Canada Edit See also Battle of the St Lawrence From the start of the war in 1939 until VE Day several of Canada s Atlantic coast ports became important to the resupply effort for the United Kingdom and later for the Allied land offensive on the Western Front Halifax and Sydney Nova Scotia became the primary convoy assembly ports with Halifax being assigned the fast or priority convoys largely troops and essential material with the more modern merchant ships while Sydney was given slow convoys which conveyed bulkier material on older and more vulnerable merchant ships Both ports were heavily fortified with shore radar emplacements searchlight batteries and extensive coastal artillery stations all manned by RCN and Canadian Army regular and reserve personnel Military intelligence agents enforced strict blackouts throughout the areas and anti torpedo nets were in place at the harbor entrances making a direct attack on those facilities unfeasible because it was impossible for Germany to provide air support Even though no landings of German personnel took place near these ports there were frequent attacks by U boats on convoys departing for Europe once these had reached the mouth of the St Lawrence Less extensively used but no less important was the port of Saint John which also saw materiel funneled through the port largely after the United States entered the war in December 1941 The port s location within the protected waters of the Bay of Fundy made it a difficult target for attack The Canadian Pacific Railway mainline from central Canada which crossed the state of Maine could be used to transport in aid of the war effort Although not crippling to the Canadian war effort given the country s rail network to the east coast ports but possibly more destructive to the morale of the Canadian public was the Battle of the St Lawrence when U boats began to venture upriver and attack domestic coastal shipping along Canada s east coast in the St Lawrence River and Gulf of St Lawrence from early 1942 through to the end of the shipping season in late 1944 From a German perspective this area contained most of the military assets in North America that could realistically be targeted for attack and therefore the St Lawrence was the only zone that saw consistent warfare albeit on a limited scale in North America during World War II Residents along the Gaspe coast and the St Lawrence River and Gulf of St Lawrence were startled at the sight of maritime warfare off their shores with ships on fire and explosions rattling their communities while bodies and debris floated ashore The number of military losses is not known although loose estimates can be made based on the number of surface units and submarines sunk Newfoundland Edit Five significant attacks on Newfoundland took place in 1942 On 3 March 1942 U 587 launched three torpedoes at St John s one hit Fort Amherst and two more hit the cliffs of Signal Hill below Cabot Tower In autumn German U boats attacked four iron ore carriers serving the DOSCO iron mine at Wabana on Bell Island in Newfoundland s Conception Bay The ships SS Saganaga and SS Lord Strathcona were sunk by U 513 on 5 September 1942 while SS Rose Castle and P L M 27 were sunk by U 518 on 2 November with the loss of 69 lives After the sinkings the submarine fired a torpedo that missed its target the 3 000 ton collier Anna T and struck the DOSCO loading pier and exploded On 14 October 1942 the Newfoundland Railway ferry SS Caribou was torpedoed by U 69 and sunk in the Cabot Strait south of Port aux Basques Caribou was carrying 45 crew and 206 civilian and military passengers One hundred thirty seven lost their lives many of them Newfoundlanders 35 Half a dozen U boat wrecks lie in waters around Newfoundland and Labrador destroyed by Canadian patrols Caribbean Edit Main articles Battle of the Caribbean and Attack on Aruba A German submarine shelled the American Standard Oil refinery at the San Nicolas harbour and the Arend Eagle Maatschappij from the Dutch British Shell Co near the Oranjestad harbour situated on the Island of Aruba a Dutch colony and some ships that were near the entrance to Lake Maracaibo on February 16 1942 Three tankers including the Venezuelan Monagas were sunk A Venezuelan gunboat General Urdaneta assisted in rescuing the crews 36 37 A German submarine shelled the island of Mona some 40 miles 64 km from the main island of Puerto Rico on March 2 Central America Edit Before 1941 the Central American nations had various diplomatic ties with Nazi Germany and the Empire of Japan After the attack on Pearl Harbor they declared war on the Axis nations The Central American nations joined the Allied side broke diplomatic relations with the Axis nations and initiated persecutions of German and Italian immigrants During the course of the war several merchant ships were sunk in the Caribbean by German submarines for example the Tela a Honduran cargo ship sunk by a U 504 submarine in 1942 38 This led the country to carry out constant air patrols over the coasts under fear of the approach of more German submarines or the general fear of an attack by Germany Other Central American cargo ships sunk by U boats are the Olancho the Comayagua and the Bluefields of Honduran and Nicaraguan origins Central American volunteers in the United States Army participated in both the European and Asia Pacific theater Japanese operations EditAleutian Islands Campaign Edit Main article Aleutian Islands Campaign U S Navy propaganda poster from 1942 43 showing a rat representing Imperial Japan and a mousetrap labeled Army Navy Civilian on a map of Alaska called Death Trap For The Jap Before Operation MI could be carried out the Japanese decided to take the Aleutian Islands On June 3 4 1942 Japanese planes from two light carriers Ryujō and Jun yō struck the U S against the city of Unalaska Alaska at Dutch Harbor in the Aleutian Islands Originally the Japanese planned to attack Dutch Harbor simultaneously with its attack on Midway but the Midway attack was delayed by one day The attack only did moderate damage on Dutch Harbor but 43 Americans were killed and 50 others wounded in the attack On June 6 two days after the bombing of Dutch Harbor 500 Japanese marines landed on Kiska one of the Aleutian Islands of Alaska Upon landing they killed two and captured eight United States Navy officers then seized control of American soil for the first time The next day a total of 1 140 Japanese infantrymen landed on Attu via Holtz Bay eventually reaching Massacre Bay and Chichagof Harbor Attu s population at the time consisted of 45 Alaska Native Aleuts and two white Americans Charles Foster Jones a 60 year old ham radio operator and weather observer and his 62 year old wife Etta a teacher and nurse The Japanese killed Charles Jones after interrogating him while Etta Jones and the Aleut population were sent to Japan where 16 of the Aleuts died and Etta survived the war A year after Japan s occupation of Kiska and Attu U S troops invaded Attu on May 11 1943 and successfully retook the island after three weeks of fighting killing 2 351 Japanese combatants and taking only 28 as prisoners of war at the cost of 549 lives Three months later on August 15 U S and Canadian forces landed on Kiska expecting the same resistance like Attu they later found the entire island empty as most of the Japanese forces secretly evacuated weeks before the landing In spite of enemy absence on the island over 313 Allied casualties were sustained nonetheless through car accidents booby traps landmines and friendly fire in which 28 Americans and four Canadians were killed in the exchange of fire between the two forces Submarine operations Edit Several ships were torpedoed within sight of West Coast Californian cities such as Los Angeles Santa Barbara San Diego and Santa Monica During 1941 and 1942 more than 10 Japanese submarines operated in the West Coast and Baja California They attacked American Canadian and Mexican ships successfully sinking over 10 vessels including the Soviet Navy submarine L 16 on October 11 1942 Bombardment of Ellwood Edit Main article Bombardment of Ellwood Japanese submarine I 17The continental United States was first shelled by the Axis on February 23 1942 when the Japanese submarine I 17 attacked the Ellwood Oil Field west of Goleta near Santa Barbara California Although only a pumphouse and catwalk at one oil well were damaged I 17 Captain Nishino Kozo radioed Tokyo that he had left Santa Barbara in flames No casualties were reported and the total cost of the damage was officially estimated at approximately 500 1 000 39 News of the shelling triggered an invasion scare along the West Coast 40 Bombardment of Estevan Point Lighthouse Edit More than five Japanese submarines operated in Western Canada during 1941 and 1942 On June 20 1942 the Japanese submarine I 26 under the command of Yokota Minoru 41 fired 25 30 rounds of 5 5 inch shells at the Estevan Point lighthouse on Vancouver Island in British Columbia but failed to hit its target 42 Though no casualties were reported the subsequent decision to turn off the lights of outer stations caused difficulties for coastal shipping activity 43 Bombardment of Fort Stevens Edit See also Bombardment of Fort Stevens In what became the second attack on a continental American military installation during World War II the Japanese submarine I 25 under the command of Tagami Akiji 44 surfaced near the mouth of the Columbia River in Oregon on the night of June 21 and June 22 1942 and fired shells toward Fort Stevens The only damage officially recorded was to a baseball field s backstop Probably the most significant damage was a shell that damaged some large phone cables The Fort Stevens gunners were refused permission to return fire for fear of revealing the guns location and or range limitations to the sub American aircraft on training flights spotted the submarine which was subsequently attacked by a U S bomber but escaped Lookout Air Raids Edit Main article Lookout Air Raids Nobuo Fujita standing by his E14YThe Lookout Air Raids occurred on September 9 1942 The second location to be subject to aerial bombing in the continental United States by a foreign power occurred when an attempt to start a forest fire was made by a Japanese Yokosuka E14Y1 Glen seaplane dropping two 80 kg 180 lb incendiary bombs over Mount Emily near Brookings Oregon The seaplane piloted by Nobuo Fujita had been launched from the Japanese submarine aircraft carrier I 25 No significant damage was officially reported following the attack nor after a repeat attempt on September 29 Fire balloon attacks Edit Main article Fu Go balloon bomb Mitchell MonumentBetween November 1944 and April 1945 the Japanese Navy launched over 9 000 fire balloons toward North America Carried by the recently discovered Pacific jet stream they were to sail over the Pacific Ocean and land in North America where the Japanese hoped they would start forest fires and cause other damage About three hundred were reported as reaching North America but little damage was caused Near Bly Oregon six people five children and a woman became the only deaths due to an enemy balloon bomb attack in the United States when a balloon bomb exploded 45 The site is marked by a stone monument at the Mitchell Recreation Area in the Fremont Winema National Forest A fire balloon is also considered to be a possible cause of the third fire in the Tillamook Burn in Oregon One member of the 555th Parachute Infantry Battalion died while responding to a fire in the Umpqua National Forest near Roseburg Oregon on August 6 1945 other casualties of the 555th were two fractures and 20 other injuries Cancelled Axis operations EditGermany Edit In 1940 the German Air Ministry secretly requested designs from the major German aircraft companies for its Amerikabomber program in which a long range strategic bomber would strike the continental United States from the Azores more than 2 200 miles 3 500 km away Planning was complete in 1942 with the submittal of the program to Goering s RLM offices in March 1942 resulting in cogent piston engined designs from Focke Wulf Heinkel Junkers and Messerschmitt who had built the ultra long range Messerschmitt Me 261 before WW II but by mid 1944 the project had been abandoned as too expensive with a serious increase in the need for defensive fighters needing to come from Nazi Germany s by then rapidly diminishing aviation production capacity Hitler had ordered that biological warfare should be studied only for the purpose of defending against it The head of the Science Division of the Wehrmacht Erich Schumann lobbied for Hitler to be persuaded otherwise America must be attacked simultaneously with various human and animal epidemic pathogens as well as plant pests The plans were never adopted because they were opposed by Hitler 46 Italy Edit An Italian naval commander Junio Valerio Borghese devised a plan to attack New York harbor with midget submarines however as the tides of war changed against Italy the plan was postponed and later scrapped 47 Japan Edit Just after the attack on Pearl Harbor a force of seven Japanese submarines patrolled the United States West Coast The Wolfpack made plans to bombard targets in California on Christmas Eve or Christmas Day of 1941 However the attack was postponed to December 27 in order to avoid attacking during the Christian festival and offending German and Italian allies Eventually the plan was canceled altogether for fears of American reprisal In 1946 an unexploded Japanese torpedo was found near the Golden Gate Bridge and it has been interpreted as evidence of an attack potentially targeting the bridge itself in late December of 1941 48 The Japanese constructed a plan early in the Pacific War to attack the Panama Canal a vital water passage in Panama used during World War II primarily for the Allied supply effort The Japanese attack was never launched because Japan suffered crippling naval losses at the beginning of conflict with the United States and United Kingdom See Aichi M6A The Imperial Japanese Army launched Project Z also called the Z Bombers Project in 1942 similar to the Nazi German Amerika Bomber project to design an intercontinental bomber capable of reaching North America The Project Z plane was to have six engines of 5 000 horsepower each the Nakajima Aircraft Company quickly began developing engines for the plane and proposed doubling HA 44 engines the most powerful engine available in Japan into a 36 cylinder engine 49 Designs were presented to the Imperial Japanese Army including the Nakajima G10N Kawasaki Ki 91 and Nakajima G5N None developed beyond prototypes or wind tunnel models save for the G5N In 1945 the Z project and other heavy bomber projects were cancelled During the final months of World War II Japan had planned to use bubonic plague as a biological weapon against U S civilians in San Diego California during Operation Cherry Blossoms at Night The plan was set to launch at night on September 22 1945 However it was shelved because Japan surrendered on August 15 1945 50 51 52 Other alarms EditFalse alarms Edit These false alarms have generally been attributed to military and civilian inexperience with war and poor radars of the era Critics have theorized they were a deliberate attempt by the Army to frighten the public in order to stimulate interest in war preparations 53 Alerts following Pearl Harbor Edit On December 8 1941 rumors of an enemy carrier off the coast led to the closing of schools in Oakland California a blackout enforced by local wardens and radio silence followed that evening 53 The reports reaching Washington of an attack on San Francisco were regarded as credible 53 The affair was described as a test but Lt Gen John L DeWitt of the Western Defense Command said Last night there were planes over this community They were enemy planes I mean Japanese planes And they were tracked out to sea You think it was a hoax It is damned nonsense for sensible people to assume that the Army and Navy would practice such a hoax on San Francisco 53 Rumors continued on the West Coast in the following days An alert of a similar nature occurred in the Northeast on December 9 53 At noon advices were received that hostile planes were only two hours distance away 53 Although there was no general hysteria fighter aircraft from Mitchel Field on Long Island took the air to intercept the raiders Wall Street had its worst sell off since the Fall of France school children in New York City were sent home and several radio stations left the air 53 In Boston police shifted heavy stores of guns and ammunition from storage vaults to stations throughout the city and industrial establishments were advised to prepare for a raid 53 Battle of Los Angeles Edit Main article Battle of Los Angeles The Battle of Los Angeles also known as The Great Los Angeles Air Raid is the name given by contemporary sources to the imaginary enemy attack and subsequent anti aircraft artillery barrage which took place in 1942 from February 24 and early on February 25 over Los Angeles California 54 55 Initially the target of the aerial barrage was thought to be an attacking force from Japan but Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox speaking at a press conference shortly afterward called the incident a false alarm Newspapers of the time published a number of sensational reports and speculations of a cover up to conceal an actual invasion by enemy airplanes When documenting the incident in 1983 the U S Office of Air Force History attributed the event to a case of war nerves likely triggered by a lost weather balloon and exacerbated by stray flares and shell bursts from adjoining batteries 56 57 Minor alerts Edit 1942 Edit In May and June the San Francisco Bay Area underwent a series of alerts May 12 A twenty five minute air raid alert May 27 West Coast defenses put on alert after Army codebreakers learned that the Japanese intended a series of hit and run attacks in reprisal for the Doolittle Raid May 31 The battleships USS Colorado and USS Maryland set sail from the Golden Gate to form a line of defense against any Japanese attack mounted on San Francisco June 2 A nine minute air raid alert including at 9 22 pm a radio silence order applied to all radio stations from Mexico to Canada See also EditAmerican Theater 1914 1918 Amerikabomber Battle of the Atlantic German submarine U 550 discovered off Massachusetts German submarine U 853 destroyed off Rhode Island German submarine U 869 destroyed off New Jersey Greenland in World War II List of Japanese spies 1930 45 Invasion of the United States Operation Pastorius Project Z List of theaters and campaigns of World War IINotes Edit United States Navy Battle Streamers World War II American Theater 1941 1945 Archived from the original on 2015 01 09 Retrieved 2011 05 23 O Hara 2004 pp 7 9 Carey 2004 p 9 10 a b Carey 2004 Morison 1947 p 376 Morison 1947 p 386 Votaw 1950 p 10579ff and 1951 p 93 Maximiano amp Neto 2011 p 6 Gastaldoni Ivo A ultima guerra romantica Memorias de um piloto de patrulha The last romantic war Memoirs of a maritime patrol aviator in Portuguese Incaer Rio de Janeiro 1993 ISBN 8585987138 From p 153 a b Helgason Gudmundur Loss listings German U boats of WWII uboat net Retrieved 4 July 2015 Carey 2004 p 119 Barone 2013 Chapter 2 Carey 2004 p 100 Carruthers 2011 p 190 Wood Clement 1932 The Man Who Killed Kitchener The Life of Fritz Joubert Duquesne New York William Faro inc Duquesne Spy Ring Including Canada the Germans not distinguishing between the overseas enemy see Beebe 1996 Jonathan Wallace Military Tribunals spectacle org archived from the original on 12 November 2007 retrieved 2007 12 09 Agents delivered by U boat uboatwar net archived from the original on 2005 11 04 retrieved 2007 12 09 from internet archive W A Swanberg April 1970 The spies who came in from the sea American Heritage vol 21 no 3 archived from the original on 2007 12 26 retrieved 2007 12 09 http www german navy de kriegsmarine articles feature2 html Kriegsmarine article The most thorough treatment to date is probably Dean Beeby Cargo of Lies The True Story of a Nazi Double Agent in Canada University of Toronto Press 1996 pp 140 166 Chapter 7 See Michael Hadley 1985 U Boats Against Canada McGill Queens University Press 1985 pp 149 162 and Beebe 1996 Turbide Sophie Werner Alfred Waldemar von Janowski New Carlisle s Spy Gaspesian Heritage WebMagazine Retrieved 19 April 2020 Essex James W 2004 Victory in the St Lawrence The Unknown U Boat War Erin Ontario Boston Mills Press See Beebe 1996 Cecil Masterman The Double Cross System New Haven Yale University Press 1972 p 121 144 a b Michael L Hadley 1990 Chapter five The Intelligenc Gatherers Langbein Janow and Kurt U Boats Against Canada German Submarines in Canadian Waters McGill Queen s Press MQUP pp 144 167 ISBN 978 0 7735 0801 9 Kissell Joe 24 August 2018 Weather Station Kurt itod com Leckie Robert 1964 The Story of World War II New York Random House p 100 Gannon Michael 1990 Operation Drumbeat Harper pp 388 389 amp 414 415 ISBN 0 06 092088 2 Michael Salvarezza Christopher Weaver On Final Attack The Story of the U853 ecophotoexplorers com archived from the original on 1 December 2007 retrieved 2007 12 09 Hitler s Lost Sub Nova Transcript PBS November 14 2000 archived from the original on 24 December 2008 retrieved 2008 12 01 a b Minerals Management Service Gulf of Mexico Region World War II Shipwrecks U S Department of the Interior archived from the original on 17 October 2008 retrieved 2008 11 02 Pollock Jeffrey C 2019 Great Mining Camps of Canada 6 Geology and History of the Wabana Iron Mines Bell Island Newfoundland Geoscience Canada 46 2 69 83 doi 10 12789 geocanj 2019 46 148 S2CID 199104273 Retrieved 14 May 2023 Shells at Aruba Time February 23 1942 archived from the original on 10 December 2007 retrieved 2007 12 09 Schenia Robert L 1987 Latin America A Naval History 1810 1987 Annapolis Maryland United States Naval Institute Press ISBN 0 87021 295 8 OCLC 15696006 Tela Honduras Steam merchant Ships hit by German U boats during WWII uboat net uboat net Retrieved 2021 04 28 The Shelling of Ellwood The California State Military Museum archived from the original on 5 January 2008 retrieved 2007 12 09 Young Donald J Phantom Japanese Raid on Los Angeles Archived 2008 01 24 at the Wayback Machine World War II September 2003 Sensuikan HIJMS Submarine I 26 Tabular Record of Movement combinedfleet com retrieved 2007 12 09 Conn Stetson Engelman Rose C Fairchild Byron 2000 1964 The Continental Defense Commands After Pearl Harbor Guarding the United States and its Outposts United States Army Center of Military History CMH Pub 4 2 archived from the original on 25 December 2007 retrieved 2007 12 09 Japanese Submarines on the West Coast of Canada pinetreeline org archived from the original on 2008 07 08 retrieved 2007 12 09 Sensuikan HIJMS Submarine I 25 Tabular Record of Movement combinedfleet com retrieved 2007 12 09 Kravets David May 5 2010 May 5 1945 Japanese Balloon Bomb Kills 6 in Oregon Wired com Retrieved 4 October 2010 Biologists Under Hitler Ute Deichmann Thomas Dunlap Harvard University Press 1999 pages 279 282 Christiano D Adamo Operations Regia Marina Italiana Golden Gate Torpedo Attack Japanese Assault on San Francisco 1941 archived from the original on 2021 11 14 retrieved 2021 09 17 Horn Steve 2005 The Second Attack on Pearl Harbor Operation K and Other Japanese Attempts to Bomb America in World War II Naval Institute Press p 265 ISBN 978 1 59114 388 8 Plague Yersinia Pestis Weapons of Mass Destruction GlobalSecurity org Amy Stewart April 25 2011 Where To Find The World s Most Wicked Bugs Fleas National Public Radio Russell Working June 5 2001 The trial of Unit 731 The Japan Times a b c d e f g h Japanese War Planes Over San Francisco 1941 www sfmuseum net Archived from the original on 2011 11 20 Retrieved 2010 09 08 Caughey John Caughey LaRee 1977 Los Angeles biography of a city University of California Press p 364 ISBN 978 0 520 03410 5 Farley John E 1998 Earthquake fears predictions and preparations in mid America Southern Illinois University Press p 14 ISBN 978 0 8093 2201 5 California and the Second World War The Battle of Los Angeles The California State Military Museum archived from the original on 18 December 2007 retrieved 2007 12 09 The Battle of Los Angeles Virtual Museum of the City of San Francisco archived from the original on 2007 09 28 retrieved 2007 12 09 Works cited Edit Barone Joao 2013 1942 O Brasil e sua guerra quase desconhecida 1942 Brazil and its almost Forgotten War in Portuguese Rio de Janeiro ISBN 978 85 209 3394 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Beebe Dean 1996 Cargo of Lies The True Story of a Nazi Double Agent in Canada University of Toronto Press ISBN 0 8020 0731 7 Carey Alan C 2004 Galloping Ghosts of the Brazilian Coast Lincoln NE USA iUniverse Inc ISBN 978 0 595 31527 7 Carruthers Bob 2011 The U Boat War in the Atlantic Volume III 1944 1945 Coda Books ISBN 978 1 78159 161 1 Maximiano Cesar Campiani Neto Ricardo Bonalume 2011 Brazilian Expeditionary Force in World War II Long Island City Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84908 483 3 Morison Samuel Eliot 1947 History of United States Naval Operations in World War II The Battle of the Atlantic September 1939 May 1943 Boston Little Brown ISBN 978 0 252 06963 5 Retrieved 8 November 2017 O Hara Vincent 2004 The German fleet at war 1939 1945 Naval Institute Press Votaw Homer C 1950 51 The Brazilian Navy in World War II US Government Printing Office Congressional Record Proceedings and Debates of US Congress Volume 96 Part 8 Senate and Military Review Volume XXX Number X Further reading EditDobbs Michael Saboteurs The Nazi Raid on America ISBN 0 375 41470 3 2004 Duffy J P Target America Hitler s Plan to Attack the United States Praeger Publishers PB The Lyons Press ISBN 0275966844 A Booklist review Gimpel Erich Agent 146 The True Story of a Nazi Spy in America ISBN 0 312 30797 7 2003 Griehl Manfred Luftwaffe over America The Secret Plans to Bomb the United States in World War II ISBN 1 85367 608 X 2004 Hadley Michael 1985 U Boats Against Canada German Submarines in Canadian Waters McGill Queens University Press ISBN 0 7735 0801 5 Horn Steve 2005 The Second Attack on Pearl Harbor Operation K And Other Japanese Attempts to Bomb America in World War II Naval Institute Press ISBN 1 59114 388 8 Mikesh Robert C Japan s World War II Balloon Bomb Attacks on North America Smithsonian Institution Press 1973 Kesich Gregory D April 13 2003 1944 When spies came to Maine Portland Press Herald archived from the original on 2007 09 22 retrieved 2007 12 09 O Donnell Pierce In Time of War Hitler s Terrorist Attack on America Operation Pastorius The New Press 2005 ISBN 978 1 56584 958 7 Webber Bert Silent Siege Japanese Attacks Against North America in World War II Ye Galleon Press Fairfield Washington 1984 ISBN 0 87770 315 9 hardcover ISBN 0 87770 318 3 paperbound External links EditHistory army mil Defense of Americas Archived 2012 09 26 at the Wayback Machine publication of the United States Army Center of Military History History army mil American Theater Army Responses Archived 2007 12 25 at the Wayback Machine Military com American Theater targets Port Orford Lifeboat station org Japanese submarine attacks on the West Coast History navy mil German Sabotage operations Regiamarina net Planned Italian attack on New York harbor SFmuseum org The SF Bay Area at War German navy de Details of the German secret agents that landed in North America Alaskainvasion com Red White Black amp Blue feature documentary about the World War II Battle of Attu in the Aleutians Uboat net The Battle of the St Lawrence Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title American Theater World War II amp oldid 1171770147, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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