Sortie Operation Viking () began at 19:00 on 22 February 1940. The flotilla, operating from their
anchorage near
Wilhelmshaven off
Schillig, was proceeding quickly towards , a -wide swept channel of the , a defensive minefield protecting the German Bight. The ships were sailing on a bearing of 300°, when they were attacked from the air. At about Döring the gunner of Heinkel 1H+IM, flying towards the English coast, had seen the
wake of a ship to port and reported it to the pilot, Jäger. The pilot saw a ship moving fast towards the north-west. On the sea, lookouts on
Friedrich Eckoldt saw an aircraft pass overhead at an estimated , not showing appropriate recognition signals, which return soon after. At the pilot and the observer, Schräpler, were certain that the ship was a merchant vessel, which also failed to show recognition signals.
Air attack While hesitating to attack, the Heinkel was fired on with anti-aircraft guns by
Richard Beitzen and
Erich Koellner, whose officers thought that they had identified a British aircraft. Döring returned fire with the ventral machine-gun at once. The lookouts on
Max Schultz saw German markings on the aircraft at the last moment but their wireless message on the common frequency went unheeded. Günther Hosemann claimed that he saw the markings in the light of the gun flashes but others doubted him. At Men on
Max Schultz saw the aircraft come out of a cloud bank with the moon astern of it and transmitted "" ("Aeroplane has been sighted in the black cloud in front of the moon") as Jäger made a bombing run at , convinced by the gunfire from the ship that it was hostile. The first two bombs and the fourth missed but the third bomb hit
Leberecht Maass amidships, between bridge and the first funnel. The ship quickly lost speed, veering to starboard and sending "" ("Have been hit. Need assistance."). As the other ships turned to assist the ship, Berger ordered them back into formation, lest they strayed out of the swept channel but reversed course at .
Friedrich Eckoldt slowly approached
Leberecht Maass, making rescue and towing equipment ready and was distant when the aircraft returned for a second bombing run and hit
Leberecht Maass with two bombs out of four. A big fireball rose from around the stern funnel and those above deck on
Friedrich Eckoldt saw that
Leberecht Maass had broken in two and was sinking in as the Heinkel departed to the west. The other destroyers manoeuvred towards
Leberecht Maass,
Erich Koellner stopping engines to drift towards the survivors in the water between the two halves of the ship, sending "" ("To all. Maass going down. Send boats."). With lifeboats swung out, ready to begin the rescue,
Erich Koellner, along with those of
Friedrich Eckoldt and
Richard Beitzen began taking on survivors.
Loss of Max Schultz At there was another big explosion and lookouts on
Richard Beitzen reported another air attack;
Theodor Riedel, from the explosion, was moving towards it when it obtained a
hydrophone contact to starboard, which caused more confusion.
Theodor Riedel dropped four depth-charges which detonated too close to the destroyer and jammed the rudder, the ship moving in circles until it was freed. The other destroyers continued to rescue survivors but then a lookout on
Erich Koellner reported a submarine. Berger gave orders to stop the rescue until the submarine was sunk,
Max Schultz not replying to the order.
Erich Koellner accelerated to attack the submarine, one of its boats, not yet cast off, being dragged under the stern. The captain tried to ram the submarine but it was probably the bow of
Leberecht Maass.
Max Schultz, still not replying to wireless calls, had struck one of the 120 mines laid in by the British destroyers and on the night of 10/11 January.
Higher commands During the evening, received information from KG 26 that one of its aircraft had attacked a ship, about north of the
lightvessel. The aircraft had received return fire and the crew claimed to have sunk the ship. Wireless messages from the area were passed on to and SKL. The message was received at and at The report was forwarded to , the commander in chief of the ,
Hermann Göring and its chief of staff,
Hans Jeschonnek, who asked if this could have anything to do with the sinking of
Leberecht Maass and
Max Schultz. The war diary for 22 February 1940 recorded that at The fate of the destroyers came into doubt after Jäger had landed and reported sinking a ship from
Return to base At after thirty minutes of confusion, including reports of torpedo tracks and periscopes, Berger ordered the four surviving ships to return to base ("" ["Course 120. Speed "]) after recovering the lifeboats left when the submarine hunt began. Most of the men in the water had died of hypothermia by the time that the destroyers returned. Sixty survivors were rescued from the 330 men on
Leberecht Maass, none of the 308 men on
Max Schultz survived, one man on
Erich Koellner was reported missing. The dispatch of a to search for survivors was cancelled due to thick fog and at on 23 February a He 111 flying over the island of
Borkum, was shot down by navy anti-aircraft guns. ==Aftermath==