Operation Judgement, under the command of Admiral
Andrew Cunningham, was executed by aircraft from the carrier , escorted by the battleships
Ramillies, , and . They met the heavy cruiser , the light cruiser and three destroyers, then escorting Convoy MW 3 and provided cover. A rendezvous with the
Barham group from Operation Coat was to be made, with
Illustrious,
Gloucester,
York and
Berwick detaching to attack Taranto, coincident with the Force X raid. The Italians were aware of sorties from Alexandria and Gibraltar by 7 November and sent nine
submarines to attack the Malta-bound Convoy MW 3 detected on 8 November. Bombers failed to pinpoint the Judgement force and when Force H was detected heading back toward Gibraltar on 9 November, the Italians assumed that Convoy MW 3 had turned around, too. Italian confusion arose when
Barham,
Berwick,
Glasgow and their destroyers were detected 10 November off
Lemnos. The correct deduction, that they had detached from the Gibraltar-bound force, was not accompanied by a correct guess they would join with Cunningham. The same day,
Ramillies,
Coventry and two destroyers protecting Convoy ME 3 were detected and again, bombers failed to locate them. The complexity of Operation MB8, with its forces and convoys, deceived the Italians into thinking that only normal convoying was underway. While Italian
reconnaissance was characteristically bad, in the end, the Italians had only failed to keep track of
Illustrious. That the Italians expected the British to behave in what was usual was the cause of the mistake. ==See also==