With the outbreak of the Second World War the U-boat Arm found the success of the pre-war trials had created some complacency; when these tactics were first tried in October 1939 (
Hartmann's wolfpack) they were a failure; Hartmann found he was unable to exercise any tactical control from his boat at sea and the convoy attack was unsuccessful, while three U-boats were lost in the operation. A second attempt the following month also failed. A further attempt in June 1940 following the Norwegian campaign (
Rösing's wolfpack) also failed, leading to a re-think of German tactics. ====== The revised approach saw Dönitz micromanaging operations at sea from his headquarters in occupied France, relying on the supposedly unbreakable
Enigma code to transmit and receive orders and co-ordinate movements. U-boat movements were controlled by U-boat Command (
BdU) from Kerneval. U-boats usually patrolled separately, often strung out in lines across likely convoy routes to engage merchant ships and small vulnerable destroyers, being ordered to congregate only after one located a convoy and alerted the . (pack tactics) consisted of as many U-boats as could reach the scene of the attack. With the exception of the orders given by the , U-boat commanders could attack as they saw fit. Often they were given a probable number of U-boats that would arrive and when they were in contact with the convoy, make call signs to see how many had arrived. If their number were sufficiently high compared to the expected threat of the escorts, they would attack. This led to a series of successful pack attacks on
Allied convoys in the latter half of 1940 (known as "
the Happy Time" to the U-boat men).
Drawbacks While the German pack tactic was effective, it had several drawbacks. Most notably, wolfpacks required extensive
radio communication to coordinate the attacks. This left the U-boats vulnerable to a device called the
High Frequency Direction Finder (HF/DF or
Huff-Duff), which allowed Allied naval forces to determine the location of the enemy boats transmitting and attack them. The pack tactic was able to bring about a
force concentration against a convoy but no tactics for co-ordinated attack were developed; each commander present was left to move against the convoy as he saw fit. The
escort groups developed
group tactics against U-boat attack, gaining an advantage. As packs got larger the risks from this lack of co-ordination increased, such as overlapping attacks, collision or
friendly fire incidents (in May 1943 for example, two U-boats stalking a Gibraltar convoy, and collided, with the loss of both). Away from the Atlantic, the U-boat Arm had less scope for pack attacks;
Operation Drumbeat against US shipping in early 1942, off the US eastern coast, and
Operation Neuland in the Caribbean, were conducted by U-boats on individual patrol, until the introduction of a convoy system there saw the U-boats withdraw to easier hunting grounds. In the South Atlantic and the Indian Ocean individual routing by the Allies and small numbers of U-boats active there again saw the employment of the lone wolf approach by the U-boat Arm.
Countermeasures Although the wolfpacks proved a serious threat to Allied shipping, the Allies developed counter-measures. The expansion of the escort force, and the development of well-trained and well-organized escort groups, led to more and more successes as the campaign went on. Time and again escort groups were able to fight off numerically superior packs and destroy attackers, until the rate of exchange became ruinous. Effective air cover from long-range aircraft with radar, and
escort carriers and
blimps, allowed U-boats to be spotted as they shadowed a convoy (waiting for the cover of night to attack).
Naming Some sources refer to different wolfpacks by name or provide lists of named wolfpacks, though this can be a misnomer. Dönitz’s pack tactic envisaged a patrol line of six to ten boats (later, twenty to thirty or more) across a convoy route to search for targets. If a convoy was found the boats would form a pack, to mount a simultaneous attack. At the outbreak of the Second World War Germany had had 27 sea- and ocean-going U-boats, enough to mount a single patrol line in the Atlantic. Patrol lines were not named and if a pack was formed it was referred to by the name of the skipper who had found the target. This situation improved with the fall of France and the occupation of the French Atlantic ports but U-boat construction had barely kept pace with losses and it was not until the summer of 1941 that several patrol groups were possible, creating the need to differentiate them. At first this was by location (West, Centre, South, Greenland) but in August began to assign codenames, chosen for their historical or cultural value. This continued until the end of the campaign, though after the spring of 1944 the had moved away from pack attacks to its inshore campaign of individual patrols operating in British coastal waters. The last named U-boat group was , a seven boat operation against the North American coast, countered by the USN with
Operation Teardrop. The codename applied to the group or to the patrol line that they formed. Not all groups so named were involved in pack tactics; the group was formed to enter the Mediterranean and support operations there; group were dispatched to the waters off South Africa, where they operated independently. Of those groups forming patrol lines not all found convoys or were able to form packs if they did. Where a named group formed and mounted a pack attack on a convoy, referring to it by name as a wolfpack is appropriate. ==American submarines in World War II==