Operation Cockpit

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Template:Short description Template:Good article Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "Infobox military conflict". Operation Cockpit was an Allied attack against the Japanese-held island of Sabang on 19 April 1944. It was conducted by aircraft flying from British and American aircraft carriers and targeted Japanese shipping and airfields. A small number of Japanese ships and aircraft were destroyed, and one American aircraft was lost. While the attack was successful tactically, it failed to divert Japanese forces from other areas as had been hoped.

The attack on Sabang was the first of several carrier raids conducted by the British-led Eastern Fleet during 1944 and 1945. It sought to prevent the Japanese from transferring forces in the area to contest a planned American landing in New Guinea. Sabang's defenders were taken by surprise, and the attackers encountered little opposition. The Japanese did not react to the operation as the Eastern Fleet was not seen as a serious threat and their forces in the area were being preserved for use against an expected major American offensive in the Central Pacific. Nevertheless, the Allies were pleased with the results of the attack.

Background

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". From mid-1942 until early 1944 the Allies did not undertake any offensive naval operations in the Indian Ocean. Their main naval force there, the British-led Eastern Fleet which was headed by Admiral James Somerville, was weak. From January 1943 the fleet did not include any aircraft carriers and its three elderly battleships were transferred later in the year.Template:Sfn The remaining force was capable only of protecting Allied shipping.Template:Sfn Fortunately for the Allies, the Japanese did not attempt any large-scale operations in the Indian Ocean. This allowed the Eastern Fleet to focus on countering German and Japanese submarines and using its own submarines to raid Japanese shipping.Template:Sfn

Map of the western Pacific Ocean and South East Asia marked with the territory controlled by the Allies and Japanese as at April 1944
The strategic situation in the Pacific in mid-April 1944. The red shaded area was controlled by the Allies and the remainder was controlled by Japan.

At the Cairo Conference held during November 1943, the Allied leadership agreed that "the main effort against Japan should be made in the Pacific", and that the Indian Ocean would be a subsidiary theatre. It was also decided that any offensive operations, including carrier raids, in the theatre would have the goals of "maintaining pressure on the enemy, forcing dispersion of his forces, and attaining the maximum attrition of his air and naval forces and shipping".Template:Sfn

In January 1944 the Admiralty, the British Government institution responsible for administering the Royal Navy, decided to substantially reinforce the Eastern Fleet.Template:Sfn This had been made possible by the surrender of the Italian Navy in 1943, which removed one of the Royal Navy's main opponents and gave the Allies control over the Mediterranean Sea.Template:Sfn The reinforcements which were scheduled to arrive over the next four months comprised 146 warships, and included three battleships, two aircraft carriers, fourteen cruisers and large numbers of destroyers and other escort vessels. The first substantial group of reinforcements reached the Eastern Fleet's base at Ceylon on 27 January; these included the aircraft carrier Template:HMS, battleships Template:HMS and Template:HMS and battlecruiser Template:HMS.Template:Sfn Shortages of destroyers hindered the fleet's ability to conduct offensive operations until April, however, as priority needed to be given to escorting convoys.Template:Sfn

Also in early 1944, the Japanese military transferred its main naval striking force, the Combined Fleet, to Singapore. This was done to evacuate the fleet's bases in the central Pacific, which were now vulnerable to American attacks, and concentrate it at a location with good naval repair facilities and ready access to fuel. The Japanese did not intend any large-scale attacks into the Indian Ocean. The Allies were concerned about the Combined Fleet's intentions, and Somerville believed that his force would be unable to counter the fleet if it entered the Indian Ocean. As a result, additional Allied air units were dispatched to protect Ceylon.Template:Sfn The United States Navy also agreed to temporarily transfer the aircraft carrier Template:USS and three destroyers from the Pacific to augment the Eastern Fleet; this was done so that the British did not have to free up reinforcements for the Eastern Fleet by cancelling the planned Operation Tungsten carrier raid on the German battleship Tirpitz in Norway.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Sabang island lies off the northern end of Sumatra. The island was used as a base by the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) during the Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies.Template:Sfn Its location at the northern entrance of the Strait of Malacca made it strategically important.Template:Sfn The IJN's 9th Base Force was the main unit stationed at Sabang, and was commanded by Rear Admiral Hirose Sueto from February 1944.Template:Sfn The British believed that the island's garrison comprised 9,000 personnel.Template:Sfn

Prelude

In late March the main body of the Eastern Fleet, including Illustrious, Renown, Queen Elizabeth and Valiant, sortied into the Indian Ocean. The main goals of what was designated Operation Diplomat were to search for Japanese ships following an unsuccessful cruiser raid and link up with Saratoga. The operation also provided an opportunity to practice operating the ships together and refuelling at sea ahead of the fleet commencing offensive operations. The British ships departed Ceylon on 21 March, refuelled from tankers between 24 and 26 March and rendezvoused with Saratoga on 27 March. The carriers' aircraft exercised together during the return voyage, and the fleet arrived back at Ceylon on 2 April.Template:Sfn

Black and white photograph of a ship in port
USS Saratoga at Hobart in March 1944 during her voyage to the Indian Ocean

The decision to attack Sabang was made in response to a request from the head of the US Navy, Admiral Ernest King. King asked that the Eastern Fleet undertake a raid in mid-April to prevent the Japanese from dispatching naval aircraft stationed in southern Malaya to attack the large Allied naval forces allocated to an amphibious landing at Hollandia in New Guinea on 22 April.Template:Sfn At a meeting on 12 April, the Eastern Fleet's senior officers decided to conduct a carrier raid on Sabang.Template:Sfn The plans for the operation also included a surface ship bombardment of Sabang, but it was decided to omit this shortly before the fleet departed as it was believed that operating close to the shore would be unduly risky.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The raid was considered to be a trial, to test the fleet's procedures ahead of more ambitious operations.Template:Sfn During the first two weeks of April, the Eastern Fleet finalised its plans for the attack and rehearsed the operation.Template:Sfn This was to be the first aircraft carrier raid attempted by the Eastern Fleet.Template:Sfn

The Allies had little intelligence on the Japanese forces at Sabang, with holdings being limited to small numbers of aerial reconnaissance photographs.Template:Sfn It was believed that the island was strongly defended, with the Japanese having a radar station and an airfield there.Template:Sfn Somerville decided against further reconnaissance flights over the island due to the risk that they would alert the Japanese.Template:Sfn Intelligence gained from breaking German and Japanese codes contributed to the planning for Operation Cockpit by allowing the Allies to track the locations of enemy warships and air units in the region. The Far East Combined Bureau also developed a radio deception plan for the operation which proved successful.Template:Sfn

Despite the Allied intentions, the Japanese had little interest in engaging the Eastern Fleet. The IJN was aware that the fleet was too weak to pose a significant threat, and were preserving their forces, including the aircraft in southern Malaya, to contest the American advance through the central Pacific. The Combined Fleet was under orders to only engage the Eastern Fleet if it mounted a large scale attack.Template:Sfn Land based naval bombers were assigned to counter Allied naval forces in the Indian Ocean.Template:Sfn

Attack

Black and white aerial photograph of smoke rising from a port town
Oil tanks, ships and port installations at Sabang on fire during the attack

The attack force sailed from the Eastern Fleet's main base at Trincomalee on 16 April, and was led personally by Somerville from Queen Elizabeth.Template:Sfn It comprised 27 warships from six navies; the historian H.P. Willmott has observed that Operation Cockpit was "perhaps the most cosmopolitan naval operation of the war".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Royal Navy contributed Illustrious, two battleships, one battlecruiser, four cruisers and seven destroyers. The American contingent comprised Saratoga and three destroyers. Other elements of the force included the recently arrived French battleship Richelieu, Dutch cruiser Template:HNLMS and a Dutch destroyer, the New Zealand cruiser HMNZS Gambia and four Australian destroyers.Template:Sfn The Allied ships were organised into two task forces; Task Force 69 was a battleship covering force comprising the three battleships, two cruisers and nine destroyers. Task Force 70 comprised the aircraft carriers, Renown, two cruisers and six destroyers.Template:Sfn The submarine Template:HMS was also stationed near Sabang to rescue any airmen who were forced down during the attack.Template:Sfn This was the largest force the Eastern Fleet had been able to send into combat up to that point in the war.Template:Sfn

Each carrier had an air group made up of units from their parent navies. Illustrious embarked two squadrons equipped with 14 Vought F4U Corsair fighters each and two squadrons operating a total of 21 Fairey Barracuda torpedo and dive bombers. SaratogaTemplate:'s air group comprised a squadron with 26 Grumman F6F Hellcat fighters, a squadron with 24 Douglas SBD Dauntless dive bombers and a squadron operating 18 Grumman TBF Avenger torpedo bombers, as well as a single Hellcat allocated to the Air Group Leader.Template:Sfn The commander of SaratogaTemplate:'s air group, Commander Joseph C. Clifton, led both carriers' air wings during Operation Cockpit.[1]

After an uneventful journey, and without being detected by the Japanese, the Allied force arrived at the carriers' flying off point Template:Convert south-west of Sabang in the early hours of 19 April. The strike force began to be launched at 5:30 am; Illustrious dispatched 17 Barracudas and 13 Corsairs and Saratoga 24 Hellcats, 18 Dauntlesses and 11 Avengers.Template:Sfn Of the Hellcats, 16 were to escort the strike force and 8 attack Lho Nga airfield in northern Sumatra.Template:Sfn Clifton led the strike force while it was in the air.[2] A combat air patrol comprising four Corsairs and eight Hellcats was maintained over the fleet.Template:Sfn

Black and white aerial photo of an open area in a jungle with several columns of smoke rising from it
Fires burning at Sabang airfield after it was attacked

The attack on Sabang began at 7 a.m. SaratogaTemplate:'s aircraft arrived over the island at that time, and IllustriousTemplate:' began their attack from a different direction a minute later.Template:Sfn The Allied bombers mainly attacked oil storage tanks, shipping and harbour installations. The fighters struck Sabang's airfield and Lho Nga airfield. Three of Sabang's four oil tanks were set on fire and the harbour installations were badly damaged. Few ships were in the area, though a merchant vessel was sunk and another driven aground. The fighter pilots claimed to have destroyed 21 Japanese aircraft at Sabang airfield and another three at Lho Nga.Template:Sfn The British pilots failed to engage a number of worthwhile targets of opportunity.Template:Sfn

The Japanese at Sabang were taken by surprise. Anti-aircraft batteries began firing on the Allied aircraft after the attack had commenced, and no Japanese fighters were encountered in the air. A Hellcat was shot down, and its pilot was rescued by Tactician while under fire from coastal artillery.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Clifton led a group of fighter aircraft which drove off a Japanese torpedo boat that was threatening the submarine during the rescue.[1] Eleven other American aircraft were damaged.Template:Sfn

As the Allied fleet withdrew, it was approached by three Japanese Mitsubishi G4M torpedo bombers. All were shot down by Hellcats about Template:Convert to the north-east of the ships.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Allied warships fired on Japanese aircraft twice during the night of 19/20 April. Some of the destroyers also fired at what turned out to be an Allied Douglas DC-3 transport aircraft that was flying from Cocos Islands with its identification friend or foe system turned off. During a rain squall in the afternoon of 20 April Renown mistook the Australian destroyer Template:HMAS for a Japanese vessel and briefly engaged it with her secondary armament.Template:Sfn The attack force returned to Ceylon on 21 April.Template:Sfn

Aftermath

The Allies were satisfied with the results of Operation Cockpit.Template:Sfn While it did not inflict heavy casualties on the Japanese, the Royal Navy learned useful lessons.Template:Sfn In particular, the British were impressed with the more efficient ways SaratogaTemplate:'s crew managed flying operations.Template:Sfn Clifton was made an honorary companion of the Distinguished Service Order for his role in the operation.[1] The attack had no effect on Japan's military strategy or deployments. The aircraft in southern Malaya remained there, and no changes were made to the plans to resist the Allied landings at Hollandia.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Shortly after the attack force reached Ceylon, Saratoga received orders to return to the United States for a refit. On Admiral King's suggestion, she and most of the other ships involved in Operation Cockpit conducted an attack on Soerabaya on her return journey. This raid, Operation Transom, was undertaken on 17 May.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Eastern Fleet made several other carrier raids during 1944, including a second attack on Sabang on 25 July designated Operation Crimson.Template:Sfn This operation involved two British aircraft carriers, and included a battleship bombardment of the island.Template:Sfn

References

Citations

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Bibliography

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