Operation Dynamite Even before the Soviet entry into the war, Churchill had asked the
Joint Planning Staff (JPS) to consider an amphibious assault on the Norwegian coast, followed by the capture of
Oslo, with the intention of providing a platform from which Germany could be bombed or even invaded. The verdict of the JPS on the plan, code named Operation Dynamite, which was presented in a report dated 19 May 1941, was that bomber bases in Norway would have few advantages over those already established in England and that the sea crossing from Norway to Germany was too heavily dominated by enemy forces. The JPS thought that the capture of
Stavanger might prove useful, but that German air power in Norway was "sufficient to make a successful invasion improbable".
Operation Ajax The idea for an attack on northern Norway might be traced to
Joseph Stalin's first wartime message to Churchill on 18 July 1941, in which he requested that Britain mount two offensives against the coast of German-held Europe, one in northern France and the other in the
Arctic. Hinting that this might be a joint Anglo-Soviet operation, the idea was again put to the JPS, who stated that they were averse to the proposal because of the large naval and air commitment required. Churchill was not discouraged and wrote to the
Chiefs of Staff Committee suggesting that "we should attempt the liberation of Norway at the earliest possible moment". The Germans had been aggressively pushing the bounds of Swedish neutrality at that time, and the Chiefs of Staff felt that the occupation of
Trondheim might allow them to render assistance to Sweden if required. However, further study revealed that the resources for such a campaign were not available without compromising home defence or operations in the
Mediterranean theatre. In a meeting on 24 September, Churchill refused to accept the report prepared by the Chiefs of Staff, and they reluctantly agreed to pass the matter on to General Sir
Alan Brooke, then the
Commander-in-Chief, Home Forces, for further consideration. Lieutenant General
Henry Pownall, the Vice Chief of the Imperial General Staff, wrote in his diary of his exasperation with Churchill and his Norway scheme which he considered was "not merely dangerous but useless". Brooke recorded in his
war diary on 3 October 1941, that a messenger had arrived at midnight with orders to prepare a plan to attack Trondheim in one week and that he was to go to
Chequers, the prime minister's country house, that evening to discuss the idea over dinner. Accordingly, Brooke together with General Sir
John Dill,
Chief of the Imperial General Staff, Admiral Sir
Dudley Pound, the
First Sea Lord and Air Chief Marshal Sir
Charles Portal, the
Chief of the Air Staff and
Clement Attlee, the
Lord Privy Seal and Leader of the
Labour Party were also in attendance. Brooke recorded that "We sat up til 2.15 am discussing the problem and I did my best to put the PM off the plan" and that they "Resumed discussion at 11 am and went on till 1 pm, I think PM is beginning to weaken on the plan". Brooke was mistaken and later wrote: "From then on, we would continually be in trouble riding him [Churchill] off mad plans to go back to Norway. Why he wanted to go back and what he was going to do there, even if he did succeed in capturing Trondheim, we never found out". On 12 October, Brooke was required to present a detailed plan for the Norway invasion, now code named Operation Ajax, Churchill avoided the main reason (lack of air support) during two hours of interrogation; raising details such as why he foresaw frosts (as stated in the
Climate Book) and why would it take 24 hours to go from A to B (because of enemy resistance and removing road blocks). According to one account (but not mentioned by Brooke) Brooke suddenly relented and agreed to mount the expedition on the condition that the navy could take the fleet into
Trondheim Fjord in support, but the elderly Pound merely shook his head and ended the discussion. Churchill again asked the Joint Planning Staff to reconsider Ajax without reference to Brooke or Paget, but the JPS, and the Chiefs of Staff, supported Brooke's conclusions, citing the lack of
air superiority or any hope of achieving it. In January 1942, the Chiefs of Staff approved
Operation Hardboiled, a plan by the
London Controlling Section, a new secret department tasked with strategic deception. 'Hardboiled' purported that the Allies were intending to attack
Stavanger, with the intention of persuading the Germans to reinforce Norway at the expense of other active fronts; the
Royal Marines Division was scheduled for mountain warefare training, Norwegian interpreters were recruited, maps of the coast printed and
Double-Cross System agents reported rumours of the operation to their German handlers. How effective this deception was is unclear, but Hitler did reinforce the Norwegian garrison during April and May 1942 and thereafter was obsessed by the need to defend the Norwegian coast.
Operation Marrow A joint Anglo-Soviet offensive into Arctic Norway and Finland was proposed to Lieutenant General Sir
Archibald Nye during his visit to Moscow in December 1941. Code named Operation Marrow, the project was abandoned in the following month, when the Soviets withdrew their support on the grounds that the Finnish intelligence service had discovered the details of it. ==The final plan==