In early 1940, a battle raged to control the ice-free, iron-ore port in northern Norway – with changing fortunes until the very end.
This highly detailed book covers both the naval battles and the individual Norwegian, British, Polish, French and German units that fought the land campaign over northern Norway. Highly detailed maps guide you step by step through the events. Few other books on Narvik give you as much detail on the forces of the fighting five. From Gebirgsjägers to Guardsmen, Fallschirmjägers to Foreign Legionnaires, it offers you an impressive level of tactical detail, even down to company command, whilst also helping you understand the strategic confusion surrounding the whole Allied expedition to the north too.
Among the naval clashes covered in this action-packed story are the destroyer battles in the fjords, the sinking of the aircraft carrier HMS Glorious and the roles the famous battlecruisers Scharnhorst and Gneisenau played in the fighting. No less dramatic are the land battles, which include amphibious landings, sabotage, commando raids, daring ski missions and a rare parachute insertion by Gebirgsjäger troops.
David Greentree graduated from the University of York with a BA in History before completing an MA in War Studies at King's College London and qualifying as a lecturer in Further Education. In 1995 he accepted a commission in the Royal Air Force and has served in a variety of locations, including Afghanistan and Oman. He has written numerous books for Osprey, focusing on British military history and World War II. David is based in the UK.
Early German Campaign, overshadowed perhaps by greater events in France, nevertheless shown the resolution of the German military against more or less the same quality of allied soldiers, the difference was in their leadership, the eagerness to maintain open the ore railway route. This campaign shows also the destruction of the German destroyer squadron, and the early loss of an aircraft carrier from the British, due to lack of proper defensive procedures. Very poor planning on the Allied side.