XII Squadriglia MAS

{{Short description|Formation of the Royal Italian Navy}}

{{Infobox military unit

| unit_name = {{lang|it|XII Squadriglia MAS}}

| image = MAS 528.gif

| caption = The Italian motor torpedo boat MAS 528 on Lake Ladoga in the summer of 1942, during the siege of Leningrad

| start_date = May 1942

| end_date = October 1942

| country = {{flagcountry|Kingdom of Italy}}

| branch = {{navy|Kingdom of Italy}}

| type = Division ({{langx|it|squadriglia|links=no}})

| role = Anti-submarine warfare
Commerce raiding
Direct fire
Fire support
Maritime patrol
Raiding
Underwater warfare

| size = 4 motor torpedo boats

| command_structure = Naval Detachment K

| garrison = {{ill|Sortanlahti|ru|Сортанлахти|fi|Sortanlahti}}

| garrison_label = Home port

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| equipment = MAS boats

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| battles = Siege of Leningrad

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|commander1 = Giuseppe Bianchini

|commander1_label = {{lang|it|Capitano di Corvetta}}

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The {{lang|it|XII Squadriglia MAS}} ({{lit.|12th Assault Craft Division}}; {{langx|it|MAS|italic=no}}, an initialism for {{lang|it|Mezzi d{{'}}Assalto}}) was a formation of the Royal Italian Navy ({{lang|it|Regia Marina}}) which served on Lake Ladoga as part of the Axis siege of Leningrad during World War II.

Background

On 22 June 1941 the Axis, led by Nazi Germany, launched Operation Barbarossa, the invasion of the Soviet Union. During the summer of 1941 the Germans and their allies advanced into the USSR on three broad fronts, towards Leningrad, Murmansk and East Karelia in the north, Moscow in the centre, and Kiev in the south.

File:Siege of Leningrad (winter 1941).svg

By August 1941 the German Army Group North was on the outskirts of Leningrad, having occupied the Baltic states and the southwestern part of Leningrad Oblast, and captured the southern coasts of Lake Ladoga and the Gulf of Finland, while the Finns had advanced south along the Karelian Isthmus, leaving the city surrounded and cut off from all communication by land. The city's only communication route was by water, over Lake Ladoga.

To service and preserve this route, the Soviets collected a fleet of over 50 merchant vessels, protected by more than 30 escort vessels, with which they ran supply convoys to the city.{{sfn|Meister|Morozov (ed.)|2005|pp={{nowrap|273–275}}, {{nowrap|318–319}}}} Against this, the Axis had little response; their only offensive force was a single Finnish warship, the motor torpedo boat {{sclass|Sisu|motor torpedo boat|5}}, which was unable to interrupt the Soviet supply route.

In order to act against this supply route, the Axis determined to build up a naval presence on the lake, and, recognizing the {{lang|it|Regia Marina}}'s expertise in small boat operations, requested the dispatch of a force of MAS boats to the lake. In response the {{lang|it|Regia Marina}} (RM) formed the XII MAS in April 1942.

Formation

Following the request to the RM for assistance in the lake operations the RM formed the XII MAS as a section of the {{lang|it|Decima MAS}}. This took place in April 1942 at La Spezia, on the Tyrrhenian Sea. XII MAS comprised four MAS boats and their crews and support staff, a total of 99 men, under the command of {{lang|it|Capitano di Corvetta}} Giuseppe Bianchini.

File:SA-kuva 93134 MAS 529 ja MAS 526.jpg) before loading onto a train for rail transport to Lake Ladoga, June 1942]]

In May 1942 the force began the journey to the lake, loading the boats onto transports for the journey overland via the Brenner Pass and Innsbruck to Stettin, and by ship to Helsinki. The final leg was by road to Sortanlahti on Lake Ladoga, which served as the XII MAS's base of operations. The naval division arrived on June 22, 1942, 12 months to the day after the opening of Barbarossa. Already on the lake was the Finnish motor torpedo boat {{lang|fi|Sisu}}, and five days later, four German {{lang|de|Kriegsmarine}} minesweeping boats ({{langx|de|Küstenminenboot|lit=Coastal Mine Boat}}, or {{langx|de|KM-Boot|lit=KM-boat|label=none}}) also arrived. This whole force was combined into an Axis formation, Naval Detachment K, under the overall command of Finnish {{lang|fi|Eversti}} Eino Iisakki Järvinen.

Operational history

File:SA-kuva 93156.jpg

The XII MAS commenced operations on June 25, 1942, making reconnaissance sweeps across the lake, landing observers behind Soviet lines, and searching for submarines.

On July 25, 1942, MAS 526 was damaged in an accident, and was temporarily put out of action.

On the night of August 14–15, 1942, MAS 527 and MAS 528 intercepted a force of three Soviet gunboats (according to some sources, only one MAS 527 participated in the action);{{sfn|Meister|Morozov (ed.)|2005|pp=278, 290}} after an exchange of fire the MAS closed in and launched torpedoes, sinking one of the gunboats (in reality, not a single Soviet warship was lost in this action; according to Soviet sources, the gunboats {{Transliteration|ru|Nora}} and {{Transliteration|ru|Selemdzha}}, and the {{sclass2|MO|small guard ship|0}} patrol boats {{Transliteration|ru|{{nowrap|MO-199}}}}, {{Transliteration|ru|{{nowrap|MO-202}}}} and {{Transliteration|ru|{{nowrap|MO-209}}}} participated in this action on the Soviet side; one {{Transliteration|ru|Selemdzha}}'s Red Fleet man was wounded by enemy fire; on October 22, 1942, both of these Soviet gunboats participated in an operation to defend Sukho Island).{{sfn|Meister|Morozov (ed.)|2005|pp=278, 282, 290, {{nowrap|319–320}}}}

File:MAS 526(528).jpg on Lake Ladoga in the summer of 1942]]

On the night of August 27–28, 1942, MAS 527 encountered a Soviet convoy consisting of two tugs pulling a train of barges, escorted by a third tug. MAS 527 shadowed this group and summoned help, and with the arrival of MAS 528 attacked with torpedoes, causing the barge train to blow up (according to some sources, MAS 528 allegedly sank a {{GRT|1300}} lighter that was being towed by three tugs; in reality, not a single Soviet watercraft was lost on Lake Ladoga that day, although according to Soviet sources, the Soviet gunboat {{Transliteration|ru|Sheksna}} reported a fruitless engagement with two enemy motorboats).{{sfn|Meister|Morozov (ed.)|2005|pp=278, 290, {{nowrap|319–320}}}}

On September 1, 1942, MAS 529 met two Soviet gunboats while on patrol off {{ill|Verkkosaari (Lake Ladoga)|lt=Verkkosaari Island|ru|Верккосаари}}; she engaged them by gunfire, before retiring unharmed (according to some sources, one Soviet naval boat was damaged, and a starboard engine of MAS 529 failed; according to Soviet sources, the MO-class patrol boats {{Transliteration|ru|{{nowrap|MO-201}}}}, {{Transliteration|ru|{{nowrap|MO-213}}}} and {{Transliteration|ru|{{nowrap|MO-215}}}} participated in this action on the Soviet side; as a result of the engagement, six crew members of the Soviet patrol boats were wounded).{{sfn|Meister|Morozov (ed.)|2005|pp=278, 319}}

On September 29, 1942, MAS 528 and MAS 529, commanded by Bianchini, encountered a Soviet convoy of a tug and barge train, escorted by a gunboat. They were able to manoeuvre into position to make a torpedo attack, but scored no hits.

During October the force was involved in providing support to the land forces, as winter approached, and on 30 October the lake became too frozen for operations to continue. The XII MAS was evacuated from the base at Sortanlahti, withdrawing to winter quarters in Tallinn.

The spring of 1943 saw a change in the war situation; the {{lang|it|Regia Marina}} decided to transfer the XII MAS to the Mediterranean, though the four MAS boats were handed over to the Finnish Navy rather than being transported back to Italy.

Aftermath

File:SA-kuva 114392.jpg

Following its 1,000-mile journey to its area of operations, XII MAS served on Lake Ladoga for a 90-day period, making 59 tours of duty, and engaging in 17 actions, during which Soviet barges, a gunboat (Bira class) and a {{GRT|1300|disp=adj|link=off}} merchant ship were claimed to have been sunk (however, all these claims are not confirmed by Soviet sources and modern Russian research).{{sfn|Meister|Morozov (ed.)|2005|pp=278, 290, {{nowrap|319–320}}}}

Despite the skill and enthusiasm which the MAS brought to this corner of the Eastern Front, the combined operation was unable to stop Soviet efforts to maintain supply route to Leningrad,{{sfn|Ruge|1979|p=26}} and the winter of {{nowrap|1942–1943}} saw the Sinyavino offensive and Operation Iskra, which led to an easing of the Soviet supply dilemma, though the siege was not completely lifted until January 1944.

References

{{reflist}}

Further reading

  • {{cite book|last=Ruge|first=Friedrich|author-link=Friedrich Ruge|title=The Soviets as Naval Opponents {{nowrap|1941–1945}}|year=1979|location=Cambridge, UK|publisher=Patrick Stephens|isbn=0-85059-390-5}}
  • {{cite book|last=Meister|first=Jürg|year=2005|orig-year=First published in 1958 under the title {{lang|de|Der Seekrieg in den osteuropäischen Gewässern, {{nowrap|1941/45}}}}|editor-last=Morozov|editor-first=Miroslav E.|script-chapter=ru:Действия на русских внутренних водных путях|trans-chapter=Actions on Russian Inland Waterways|script-title=ru:Восточный фронт — война на море {{nowrap|1941—1945 гг.}}|trans-title=The Eastern Front: the War at Sea {{nowrap|1941–1945}}|language=ru|translator-last=Lipatov|translator-first=Sergei A.|others=Foreword and comments by Morozov, Miroslav E.|location=Moscow, RU|publisher=Eksmo|pages={{nowrap|271–321}}|isbn=5-699-09910-7|id={{ISBN|978-5-699-09910-8}}|ref={{harvid|Meister|Morozov (ed.)|2005}}}}
  • {{cite web|title=MAS operations on Lake Ladoga|language=it|url=http://digilander.libero.it/avantisavoiait/MAS%20sul%20Lago%20Ladoga.htm|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170701141301/http://digilander.libero.it/avantisavoiait/MAS%20sul%20Lago%20Ladoga.htm|archive-date=1 July 2017}}

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Category:Military units and formations of Italy in World War II

Category:MAS fleet

Category:Military units and formations established in 1942

Category:Military units and formations disestablished in 1943

Category:1942 establishments in Italy

Category:1943 disestablishments in Italy

Category:1943 establishments in Italy

Category:Naval special forces units and formations