Operation Rembrandt, 11 June To camouflage preparations, the eleven merchantmen were loaded at Alexandria, Port Said, Suez, Haifa and Beirut, rendezvousing at Port Said and Haifa. Secrecy led to a lack of practice for the military passengers who made up damage control and fire-fighting parties and some defects in the ships' guns went unnoticed. The Port Said ships
Aagtekirk,
Bhutan,
City of Calcutta and
Rembrandt of Convoy MW 11c, sailed early in the afternoon of 11 June, in Operation Rembrandt, each towing an MTB. Escorted by
Coventry and eight s, Convoy MW 11c was to simulate the Malta convoy and steam about as far as the Tobruk
meridian and turn back to rendezvous with the remainder. It was hoped that the decoy operation would lure out the Italian fleet, expose itself to attack and run short of fuel before the main convoy sailed. During the night five of the freighters for Operation Harpoon rendezvoused with the tanker
Kentucky off Gibraltar; by morning Convoy GM 4 was making to the east.
12 June Convoy MW 11a of
Ajax,
City of Edinburgh,
City of Pretoria,
City of Lincoln and
Elizabeth Bakke sailed from Haifa and Port Said on 12 June, escorted by the 7th Destroyer Flotilla of
Napier,
Norman,
Nizam,
Inconstant and
Hotspur, with fleet minesweepers
Boston and
Seaham.
Elizabeth Bakke was ordered into port from Convoy MW 11a, escorted by
Zulu due to overloading and a fouled hull, that stopped the ship keeping direction or reaching the convoy speed of . Convoy MW 11b sailed from Alexandria with
Potaro, the tanker
Bulkoil, the decommissioned battleship
Centurion, carrying supplies and operating as a decoy, the rescue ships
Malines and
Antwerp, escorted by five destroyers and four corvettes. During the evening, Convoy MW 11c was attacked from Crete by bombers of I and
City of Calcutta was damaged by a near-miss. The ship stopped and took on a list but got under way at to be ordered at to divert to Tobruk with its towed MTB, escorted by
Exmoor and
Croome. During the short night, Convoy MW 11c turned back to rendezvous off Alexandria with the rest of Convoy MW 11 the next day and the Hunts put in to refuel. Operation Harpoon was undisturbed because suspected that it was a decoy.
13 June The three convoy elements met off
Mersa Matruh during the afternoon and made for Malta as the 7th Destroyer Flotilla put into Alexandria to refuel, the rest of the destroyers sailing on and the rest leaving Alexandria with the main force, seven cruisers and their destroyer screen. During the afternoon, the weather deteriorated and the MTBs on tow were cast off to return to Alexandria but MTB 259 was damaged and sunk, the rest made port the next day. During the night a five-man raiding party was landed by submarine on Crete and damaged or destroyed about of 1 at
Maleme airfield. The activity of raiding parties was reported to Washington by Bonner Fellers; three SBS parties had landed the week previous, one to attack the aircraft but had not been able to penetrate the airfield security. After dark, Axis aircraft continuously illuminated the convoy with flares and dropped occasional bombs, then at the attacked the main escort force catching up from the east, dropping more bombs and flares until British fighters arrived after dawn.
Douglas Bostons and Wellington bombers attacked Axis airfields near
Derna and other places during the night, to interfere with Axis air operations against the convoy. At the Gazala position in Libya, the British tanks had been defeated in the fighting from and the Eighth Army was ordered to retreat the next day. Operation Harpoon continued and more aircraft of the were transferred to Sardinia but lost contact with the convoy. Two Italian cruisers and three destroyers departed Cagliari during the evening for Palermo, ready to stop a fast ship from dashing to Malta.
14 June Dust storms in Libya grounded day bombers until the evening and most of the aircraft based in Libya that operated over Vigorous. The convoy escorts reorganised, the four corvettes, two minesweepers and the 5th Destroyer Flotilla with nine destroyers being joined by destroyers of the 2nd, 7th, 12th, 14th and 22nd flotillas.
Aagtekirk,
Erica and
Primula developed engine-trouble,
Erica was sent to Mersa Matruh and the other two to Tobruk, escorted by
Tetcott. At about off Tobruk, the ships were attacked and
Primula was shaken by near misses. About forty
Junkers Ju 87 dive-bombers and
Junkers Ju 88 medium bombers bombed
Tetcott and the rest attacked
Aagtekirk, which was hit and caught fire as three bombers were shot down. Ships and boats were sent from Tobruk but could only pick up survivors by and the ship ran aground and burned out. The rest of the convoy was covered by
Hurricanes and Kittyhawks diverted from the Battle of Gazala, which protected the convoy from a big force of bombers. During the afternoon was more circumspect until the convoy was beyond the cover of the short-range British fighters, then from made seven attacks in five hours, opposed by a few long-range Kittyhawks and Beaufighters. The eight merchantmen were in four columns around the rescue ships, with the cruisers about out, the Hunt class destroyers beyond and the fleet destroyers on anti-submarine patrol outside the Hunts. The formation was effective against torpedo-bombers but risked attack by dive-bombers in the absence of British fighters. The Germans attacked from from the rear or sides in groups of dividing into twos and threes to bomb. At about attacked
Bulkoil and
Bhutan from the flank and near-missed
Bulkoil and
Potaro which took on water.
Bhutan was hit three times and sank at and passengers were picked up by the rescue ships and a destroyer but were lost. After the rescue,
Antwerp and
Malines were directed to Tobruk where the serious cases were transferred to a hospital ship and then they sailed for Alexandria, Tobruk being under artillery bombardment by Axis guns, arriving at next day. Two hours after
Bhutan sank, the periscope of was seen as the German submarine attacked
Pakenham in the outer screen. The torpedo missed but the attack on the submarine was cancelled, when torpedo boats were seen to the north-west. British fighters were ordered to engage but were bounced by
Bf 109s escorting the E-boats. The worst of the bombing stopped once dark fell and desultory bombing and flare dropping resumed. The escort force moved into night formation, the fleet destroyers in line ahead of the convoy, two cruisers and four destroyers on the port and starboard quarters and a destroyer at each corner of the formation out. The flare-dropping deterred the E-boats from coming too close but the convoy and escort crews were very tired and much of the anti-aircraft ammunition of the convoy and escorts had been expended. At a Baltimore crew flying from Malta had caught sight of the Italian fleet and gave a strength report of four cruisers with four destroyers, preceding two battleships and four destroyers, which reached Harwood at A
Photographic Reconnaissance (PR) flight over Taranto had verified the departure of the ships at and another sighting reached Harwood that at the fleet was making southwards. At Harwood signalled Vian that the Italian fleet (Admiral
Angelo Iachino) with two battleships, two heavy and two light cruisers and had sailed from
Taranto and would reach the convoy by Vian requested permission to turn back as it would be impossible for the escorts to protect the merchantmen for another long summer day. Harwood ordered Vigorous to continue towards Malta until on 15 June, then turn onto a reciprocal course. At Gazala, the Eighth Army began to withdraw after it had been defeated in the fighting from leaving a garrison inside Tobruk; both sides sent aircraft to Vigorous, which gave a respite to the armies. Harpoon came into range of the bombers and based in Sardinia. Fighter-bombers attacked first, then bombers and torpedo-bombers at the same time which sank a merchant ship and damaged a cruiser. As the convoy came within range of Sicily, ten Ju 88s joined in but the early attacks were defeated, seven British and aircraft being lost.
Night, 14/15 June The turn order was given at a hazardous manoeuvre for a large group of ships out of position, full of tired crews and menaced by Axis torpedo-boats and U-boats. As the turn was made the cruisers fell back and were attacked by the 3rd (
Siegfried Wuppermann); first at and hit
Newcastle with one torpedo head on, which was screened by destroyers as damage-control parties worked on the damage and
Newcastle soon worked back up to The destroyer was hit at were killed and the ship was so badly damaged that it was sunk by
Hotspur. As the sun rose, Convoy MW 11 was heading east and at four Wellington torpedo-bombers from Malta found the Italian fleet, dropped flares and attacked but the ships made smoke and only one Wellington dropped torpedoes. At the same time, nine 217 Squadron Beauforts took off from Malta, reached the Italians as dawn broke and the first three Beauforts attacked at achieving one torpedo hit, as two bombers pressed on through the destroyer and cruiser screen.
Trento came to a standstill after it was struck amidships at Force W, covering Operation Harpoon, turned back during the night and the convoy proceeded with the close escorts of Force X. The Italian cruisers and seven destroyers at Palermo sailed at dusk.
15 June Morning The British torpedo attack came when the Italian battlefleet was passing through the area of the 10th Submarine Flotilla, after the plan to form a line north of the track of the convoy had been overtaken by events after the Italian battleships sailed and the convoy turned back. (Lieutenant S. L. C. Maydon) picked up the Italian ships on hydrophone and steered towards the fleet as the torpedo-bombers dropped illumination flares. Maydon found that
Umbra was
Trento was circled by the battleships, which then resumed their southward course, leaving it behind with the destroyer ; at Maydon fired torpedoes at , with no hits. The Italian ships had also been seen at by (Lieutenant P. R. H. Harrison), the heavy cruisers to the west of the battleships and at
Ultimatum attacked through the destroyer screen, only to be frustrated by the cruisers zig-zagging and passing overhead. (Lieutenant J. B. de B. Kershaw) briefly sighted the battlefleet but was too far away to attack. , and (Lieutenant-Commander R. G. Norfolk) received the sighting report and surfaced to overhaul the ships but only
Thorn at caught sight of them out of range.
Umbra,
Uproar and
Ultimatum turned towards the immobilised
Trento and at
Umbra hit
Trento with two torpedoes, the ship sinking an hour later. The battlefleet continued south in two groups and eight US and one British B-24 bomber attacked at from and accurately bombed, hitting with a -bomb with little effect. As the B-24s turned away, five 39 Squadron Beauforts from Bir Amud arrived at low level, having set off at to synchronise their attack with the B-24s, minus their Beaufighter escort, which had been diverted to the ground battle. Bf 109s and
MC 202s based near Gazala intercepted the shot down two and damaged five, which turned back (one failing to return). Near the Italian battlefleet, two more Beauforts were damaged by long-range anti-aircraft fire at about but by turning broadside to bring more guns to bear, the Italian ships presented bigger targets, the Beaufort crews claiming a hit on a battleship and the US crews above reporting hits on a cruiser and a destroyer, although all torpedoes missed; the Beauforts turned for Malta and landed at Luqa, the damaged leader crash-landing. The combined HQ at Alexandria received reports only after long delays and during the night, Harwood became more apprehensive that the convoy would soon sail back into Bomb Alley and ordered another turn at Vian was then ordered to avoid the Italians until aircraft had attacked around If the attack failed, Vian was to get the convoy to Malta and if the Italian ships intercepted, the merchant ships were to be abandoned to their fate, the escorts escaping in any direction. At reconnaissance reports showed that the battlefleet was still making south, from the convoy and at Harwood ordered the ships to reverse course again. It was only at that Harwood and Tedder discovered that aircraft from Malta had engaged the Italian battlefleet and received the exaggerated claims of torpedo hits, including those on the battleships. Harwood signalled that Convoy MW 11 should turn for Malta again, the escorts to abandon the freighters if challenged and then at delegated freedom of action to Vian. At dawn, the ships of Operation Harpoon were intercepted by an Italian cruiser force and the five British fleet destroyers boldly attacked as the smaller destroyers remained with the convoy and eventually the Italian ships broke off the attack at Air attacks on the convoy had continued, two ships were damaged and one sunk. The Italian cruisers reappeared, fired on a previously disabled destroyer, which had been taken in tow by an escort destroyer; the crippled ship was left adrift, and eventually torpedoed and sunk by an aircraft. The damaged merchant ships were scuttled or abandoned by their escorts. The rest of the convoy sailed into a minefield, a destroyer hit a mine and sank, the two surviving merchantmen and the remaining escorts reaching Malta that night.
Afternoon The order from Harwood to turn for Malta reached Vian at but Axis bombers had attacked from when attacked. Most of the Ju 87s dive-bombers attacked the escorts but
City of Edinburgh and
City of Pretoria was near-missed and slightly damaged,
City of Edinburgh claiming a bomber and a probable.
Ajax was attacked by five aircraft at and six Ju 87s bombed
Birmingham, one near miss putting a front turret out of action for one shot down. The convoy escorts received a reconnaissance report that the battleships were closer and the convoy continued east, the signal granting discretion arriving at At 36 Axis aircraft returned and again concentrated on warships. on the starboard quarter was attacked by twelve (from
StG 3) was disabled and was ordered to sink the ship rather than linger in Bomb Alley. The other 24 attacked the merchant ships with no result and
Centurion, which survived and shot down a bomber. The Italian ships were close to contact but ordered Iachino to turn away when only from the convoy if the British had not been engaged by At the battlefleet turned north-west, towards
Navarino (Pylos) ready to advance should the British try again. British aircraft shadowing the battlefleet reported the turn at and at Harwood ordered Vian to turn the convoy again, asking if the Hunts and other ships had fuel enough to make Malta, the cruisers and fleet destroyers to turn for Malta after dark. Convoy MW 11 was under attack when the signal arrived and after waiting for two hours for a reply, Harwood ordered that only the four fastest merchantmen,
Arethusa and two destroyers should make a dash for Malta. The convoy and escorts had been attacked again from by Ju 87s dive-bombing and Ju 88s bombing from as ten
SM 79s attacked with torpedoes. Three ships received near misses but radar directed anti-aircraft fire in the growing darkness made the attackers cautious. At Ju 88s attacked in a shallow dive, near-missed
Arethusa and
Centurion and badly damaged
Nestor. The SM 79s attacked after one had been shot down by two Beaufighters and three more were shot down by ships' gunners, along with two bombers. German bombers in Libya flew against Vigorous from which gave some respite to the Eighth Army as it retreated towards the Egyptian frontier but left RAF landing grounds around
Gambut vulnerable to attack.
Evening As the SM 79s departed, Vian signalled to Harwood that Force A and Convoy MW 11 had less than of their ammunition left and at Harwood ordered Operation Vigorous to be abandoned and the ships to return to Alexandria. The Italian battlefleet continued away from the convoy, lost the British shadowing aircraft at and the relief aircraft was intercepted by German fighters. The 1st and 10th Submarine flotillas tried to reach a position to intercept but British signals were taking about four hours to arrive; some boats surfaced to listen to signals traffic and use the information. sailed north at was bombed at losing the chance to attack and to the west was also forced to dive at Another reconnaissance aircraft from Malta found the fleet at and the five 38 Squadron Wellington torpedo-bombers attacked at The attack was thwarted by smoke screens and the evasive manoeuvres of the fleet, except for a torpedo hit on which caused superficial damage.
Night, 15/16 and 16 June Another Axis air attack had no effect and during the night the convoy zig-zagged eastwards at , with
Nestor falling behind, down at the bow, towed by
Javelin and escorted by
Eridge and
Beaufort. At ( Franz-Georg Reschke) got through the anti-submarine cordon around Convoy MW 11 and torpedoed
Hermione, which heeled over and sank, being killed and with about Two air attacks were made on
Nestor and its escorts and at the tow parted for the second time; with dawn due and the long summer day to follow, the captain of the Australian destroyer
Nestor decided that the risk to the other destroyers was too great and had
Nestor sunk at The other destroyers caught up with the convoy during the afternoon.
City of Calcutta sailed from Tobruk with
Tetcott and
Primula and more attempts by U-boats to attack Convoy MW 11 failed, the convoy reaching Alexandria that evening.
Centurion was too deep in the water and waited at the Great Pass as the five remaining merchantmen entered port.
Bulkoil and
Ajax were escorted to Port Said by four destroyers. ==Aftermath==