Kriegsmarine Atlantic Command 193942: Naval Group West's surface menace
By (Author) Lawrence Paterson
Illustrated by Jim Laurier
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Osprey Publishing
2nd September 2025
22nd May 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Second World War
Military vehicles
Maritime history
940.545943
Paperback
80
Width 182mm, Height 246mm, Spine 10mm
253g
Germanys legendary Atlantic surface war was fought by Naval Group West. Superbly illustrated, this unpacks the details of how it operated and fought.
Having spent the 1930s on an ambitious but confused bid to build a new battle fleet, Germany began World War II woefully unprepared. Under Marinegruppenkommando West, its heavy ships and raiders were tasked with challenging Allied dominance of the Atlantic.
In this book, Kriegsmarine specialist Lawrence Paterson explores how Naval Group West took on the challenge. He reassesses the qualities of the fleet, and how the confusion over their original role meant that ships like the Bismarck were less than ideal for raiding. Operating as far afield as the Indian Ocean also relied on an elaborate tanker and supply network, as well as Germanys superb signals intelligence. He also explains the complex Kriegsmarine command structure during the 1930s and early war, how responsibility for the ships veered between Naval Group West, the Naval Staff, and type commanders, and how the conquest of France transformed the command. He also explains how the Luftwaffe failed the surface fleet, both in scouting at sea and defending them in port.
With superb artwork, 3D diagrams, maps and archive photos, this book explores and assesses Germanys commerce war, from the Graf Spees cruise to the ill-fated exploits of Bismarck, and the final high-risk retreat from Brest, the Channel Dash.
Lawrence Larry Paterson is a diving instructor who spent years researching German wrecks off Brittany, from which his first book First U-boat Flotilla directly resulted. Since then he has had over 20 books published, mostly on the Kriegsmarine. He attributes much of his interest in World War II to his grandfathers; one of whom was an ANZAC during the First World War, the other a Royal Navy stoker in the Second.
Jim Laurier is a renowned illustrator with paintings on display at the Pentagon.