Early operations Italy declared war on 10 June 1940 and the Flotilla tried to attack
Royal Navy ships and Allied convoys from Massawa but the British had suspended sailings to the Red Sea on 24 May 1940. On 7 June, the
Ostia laid 470 mines in eight barrages and the destroyer , laid two barrages with 110 mines off Assab. Leakage of
chloromethane refrigerants into the Italian submarines while submerged caused
central nervous system poisoning; ran aground while the crew was incapacitated by the gas and was wrecked on 15 June. The next day, sank the
Norwegian freighter
James Stove (8,215 GRT) off
Djibouti. On 19 June, when the submarine engaged the armed trawler
Moonstone, all the officers except a midshipman were killed in two shell explosions and the vessel was captured, along with its operational orders and taken to Aden on the same day. The British sent the sloop to find in the
Persian Gulf, where it had sunk the sloop .
Galvani was sunk on 24 June and
Torricelli, en route to take over from , after another chloromethane poisoning incident off Djibouti, was damaged by British ships on 21 June and forced to turn back.
Torricelli was spotted on 23 June near Massawa by the destroyers , , and the , aided by aircraft from
Aden.
Shoreham was damaged by
Torricelli before it was sunk and
Khartoum was sunk soon afterwards by an internal explosion. , and sailed from 19 to 21 June,
Perla running aground on 26 June and being severely damaged on a shoal, then recovered. From 26 to 31 July,
Guglielmotti searched and failed to find two Greek ships heading south from Suez. On an offensive sweep, the torpedo boats and also found nothing. From 21 to 25 August,
Guglielmotti and
Ferraris, the torpedo boats
Nullo and from 24 to 25 August,
Battisti and from 30 to 31 August,
Pantera and from 28 to 29 August searched for ships reported by spies and reconnaissance aircraft, with no result. On the night of 5/6 September,
Battisti,
Manin and
Sauro and over the night of 6/7 September, and
Tigre with
Battisti and
Sauro tried to intercept
Convoy BN 4, that had been spotted by air reconnaissance but failed to find it;
Ferraris and
Guglielmotti, further to the north, also failed to make contact but
Guglielmotti sank the Greek tanker
Atlas (4,009 GRT) on 6 September at 15°50'N, 41°50'E. From 19 to 21 September,
Leone and
Pantera,
Battisti and
Manin with the submarines
Archimede and
Guglielmotti, searched for
Convoy BN 5 but failed to find it;
Bhima (5,280 GRT) was bombed, ran aground and towed back to Aden.
Attack on Convoy BN 7 The Italian destroyers sailed on 20 October, the destroyers operating in pairs, Section I comprising the faster
Sauro (Commander Moretti degli Adimari) and
Francesco Nullo (Lieutenant Commander
Costantino Borsini). Section II, the slower, better armed
Pantera and
Leone were to divert the escorts and then attack the convoy with torpedoes. The convoy was about north-north-west of
Jabal al-Tair Island at 02:19 on 21 October, when the New Zealand cruiser,
Leander, sighted two patches of smoke bearing north.
Pantera fired over
Yarra at the convoy, inflicting some splinter damage to a
lifeboat on the convoy commodore's ship.
Auckland opened fire and the Italian ships separated and turned away at full speed west-south-west, towards Massawa, firing their aft guns.
Pantera fired two torpedoes at 23:31 and another pair at 23:34. Observers in
Yarra thought that the leading enemy vessel was hit by their fourth or fifth salvo.
Sauro fired a torpedo at
Leander which missed and made another ineffective torpedo attack at 02:07.
Nullo was not able to attack after its rudder jammed for several minutes and it went round in circles, losing contact with
Sauro. Borsini ordered
Nullo towards the Italian batteries on
Harmil, an island off Massawa. When the gunfire ceased,
Leander altered course to the north-west to intercept the ships at the South Massawa Channel (the Harmil Passage) and at 02:45, opened fire; the range was increasing and the ship was lost to sight after the first salvos. At 02:20
Leander damaged
Nullos
gyrocompass and gunnery director then lost contact in the haze.
Nullo headed toward Harmil with
Leander in pursuit and at 03:00,
Leander challenged a destroyer which turned out to be
Kimberley, also in pursuit. After five minutes, the cruiser altered course east to rejoin the convoy, since the Italian ship was drawing away at the rate of and the convoy was still vulnerable.
Action off Harmil At 05:40, off Harmil, lookouts on
Kimberley and
Nullo spotted each other at . When
Kimberley opened fire at 05:53,
Nullo was taken by surprise, having mistakenly identified the British ship as Italian.
Kimberley closed to and at 06:20,
Nullo scraped a reef, damaging a propeller and springing a leak. As
Nullo rounded Harmil at about 06:25, it was hit several times.
Nullo lost all power and Borsini gave the order to abandon ship, trying to run
Nullo aground on Harmil.
Nullo was then hit by a torpedo at 06:35, breaking in two. At 06:15 the four naval guns on Harmil engaged
Kimberley and hit it in the engine-room. While adrift from the shore battery,
Kimberley silenced two of the guns.
Kimberley managed to get under way, its speed reduced to and the shore battery ceased fire when
Kimberley was distant.
Leander left the convoy and at 06:54 increased speed to . At about 10:00,
Leander arrived and took
Kimberley in tow.
December 1940 From 3 to 5 December,
Tigre,
Leone,
Manin and
Sauro sortied with
Ferraris in another abortive attempt to find a convoy. From 12 to 22 December,
Archimede conducted two more sorties with no result and from 23 to 30 December
Ferraris lay off Port Sudan. ==1941==