Operation Deadlight
Operation Deadlight was the code name for the Royal Navy's operation from November 1945 to February 1946, during which 116 surrendered German U-boats were systematically scuttled in the Atlantic Ocean northwest of Northern Ireland to dispose of the remnants of the Kriegsmarine's submarine fleet following Germany's defeat in World War II.[1][2][3] The U-boats, primarily Type VII and Type IX models captured at war's end, were initially concentrated at ports like Lisahally in Northern Ireland before being towed in groups to a designated sinking area roughly 100 miles off the coast, where they were targeted by torpedoes from Royal Navy submarines, depth charges from aircraft, or explosive charges placed aboard.[1][2][4] Harsh winter weather and the submarines' poor condition—exacerbated by prolonged neglect and battle damage—caused approximately half to founder en route or in shallower waters rather than at the intended deep-water sites, scattering wrecks across the seabed at depths often under 100 meters.[3][5] This large-scale disposal effort, involving over a dozen escort vessels and support ships, effectively neutralized potential threats from the vessels' advanced technology while minimizing maintenance burdens on Allied navies, though a handful of innovative Type XXI elektroboote were spared for postwar testing and study.[1][2] The operation marked the end of the U-boat era that had terrorized Allied shipping during the Battle of the Atlantic, with only two sunk by demolition charges, seven by submarine torpedoes, and thirteen by aircraft, underscoring the improvised nature of many sinkings.[3][6]Historical Context
Surrender of the German U-boat Fleet
Following Germany's unconditional surrender on 8 May 1945, Grand Admiral Karl Dönitz, as the final head of the Nazi state, broadcast orders directing the U-boat fleet to terminate hostilities. This directive formed Annexure 'A' to the surrender terms, commanding all U-boats at sea to "cease all attack forthwith," report positions via latitude and longitude if possible, and proceed to the nearest British port or announced rendezvous, while obeying instructions from any Allied authority.[7] The order specified routes and areas for surrendering vessels, ensuring coordinated compliance across the Atlantic and North Sea.[7] U-boats based in ports, mainly in occupied Norway (such as Horten and Kristiansand) and Denmark, capitulated to Allied occupation forces upon their arrival, with crews ordered to disarm and prepare for internment. Those at sea, numbering approximately 49, surfaced and navigated to designated Allied harbors, often under escort to prevent self-scuttling or evasion.[8] Notable examples include U-249 surrendering at Portland, United Kingdom, on 10 May 1945, and U-858 off Delaware, United States, on 14 May 1945 after an initial at-sea capitulation.[9][10] In the United Kingdom and Ireland, key reception points included Lisahally near Londonderry, Northern Ireland, where the first arrivals docked around 14 May 1945, and Kyle of Lochalsh, Scotland, which received 33 U-boats over 12 days starting 10 May.[11] A total of 156 U-boats surrendered intact to Allied forces, comprising 155 German-built vessels and one captured Dutch submarine; the bulk fell under British custody for subsequent evaluation and disposal.[8] This process marked the effective end of the Kriegsmarine's submarine arm, with crews facing internment and vessels subjected to technical inspections before planned scuttling.[8]Allied Strategic Imperatives for Disposal
Following the unconditional surrender of Germany on May 8, 1945, the Allies faced the disposition of 156 surrendered German U-boats, primarily Type VII submarines concentrated at British ports such as Lisahally, Northern Ireland. The Potsdam Agreement, concluded on August 2, 1945, between the United States, United Kingdom, and Soviet Union, mandated the sinking of the majority of these vessels to ensure the complete demilitarization of the Kriegsmarine and prevent any potential reactivation as a naval threat.[8] This decision reflected a strategic imperative to eliminate Germany's capacity for submarine warfare, which had inflicted severe losses on Allied shipping during the Battle of the Atlantic, thereby neutralizing risks of future aggression or unauthorized use by remnants of the German military or other actors.[12] Only 30 U-boats were allocated for experimental and training purposes—10 each to the UK, US, and USSR—with the remainder designated for destruction to avoid proliferation of advanced submarine technology amid emerging postwar tensions.[8] Prime Minister Winston Churchill had advocated for the separate sinking of U-boats as early as 1943–1944, emphasizing their inherent danger compared to surface vessels, a position endorsed by US President Harry Truman to preclude division disputes among Allies.[13] Retention was deemed impractical due to the obsolescence of the U-boat designs relative to Allied submarines, the high costs of repair and maintenance—estimated at up to $1 million per vessel for damaged units like U-1406—and the lack of trained crews or operational need in postwar navies focused on demobilization.[8] Economically, scuttling offered the simplest method over land-based scrapping, which would demand scarce manpower and resources already strained by over 1 million tons of British vessels awaiting disposal, while yielding negligible scrap value from the U-boats' steel.[12][13] The Tripartite Naval Commission established a deadline of February 15, 1946, for disposal, prompting Operation Deadlight from November 27, 1945, to February 12, 1946, where 116 U-boats were towed to designated sites northwest of Ireland and sunk by gunfire, torpedoes, or demolition charges in waters over 200 meters deep to preclude salvage.[12] This approach aligned with broader Allied objectives of causal security, ensuring the irreversible removal of a weapon system proven capable of disrupting transatlantic logistics, while prioritizing efficiency over salvage proposals for components like diesel engines.[1][12]Planning and Preparation
Selection of Operational Area
The surrendered German U-boats designated for scuttling under Operation Deadlight were concentrated at two primary assembly points: Lisahally naval base on Loch Foyle in Northern Ireland and Loch Ryan in southwestern Scotland. Lisahally, adjacent to Londonderry, served as the initial concentration site for approximately 116 U-boats due to its established role as a Royal Navy facility for anti-submarine warfare and convoy operations during the war, providing secure berthing, maintenance capabilities, and proximity to repair yards.[14] Loch Ryan accommodated around 86 U-boats, selected for its deep-water natural harbor, dredged channels, and wartime infrastructure including the Cairnryan Military Port with piers and a dedicated military railway linking to Stranraer for logistical support such as crew handling and supply transport.[15] These locations were chosen to leverage existing British naval assets while minimizing the risks of dispersing the vessels across multiple distant ports.[2] The scuttling grounds were designated in the North Channel, approximately 100-130 miles northwest of the assembly points, centered around coordinates 56° N, 10° 05' W, where water depths exceeded 100 meters to ensure the submarines would sink irretrievably and resist easy salvage.[5] This area was preferred for its relatively open waters suitable for towing operations by tugs and escort vessels, while remaining within British operational control to preclude Allied disputes over asset division or potential Soviet claims on prizes.[2] Hydrographic surveys confirmed adequate seabed conditions for explosive scuttling and gunfire disposal, avoiding shallower coastal zones or major shipping routes that could pose navigational hazards.[5] The proximity reduced towing times—typically 12-24 hours per group—and allowed rapid deployment of demolition teams, though severe winter weather ultimately caused many sinkings en route rather than at the precise targets.[2]Logistics and Resource Allocation
The logistics of Operation Deadlight centered on concentrating 116 surrendered German U-boats at Loch Ryan, Scotland (86 submarines), and Lisahally, Northern Ireland (30 submarines), from where they were towed unmanned to a deep-water scuttling area roughly 130 miles northwest of Lough Foyle—equivalent to 180 miles from Loch Ryan—to ensure permanent disposal beyond salvage range. Towing operations, outlined in the Royal Navy's Operation Order of 14 November 1945, typically spanned two days per group, but severe winter weather and the submarines' deteriorated condition caused approximately 50% to founder en route, inadvertently simplifying downstream efforts.[16] Resource allocation drew primarily from Royal Navy assets, including destroyers such as HMS Garth, HMS Eglinton, HMS Zetland, HMS Onslow, HMS Escort, HMS Inglefield, and HMS Imogen for towing, escort, and gunfire support, alongside frigates like HMS Riou and HMS Zephyr, and specialized tugs including HMS Enchanter. Allied contributions included Polish Navy vessels, notably the escort destroyer ORP Krakowiak for towing and the destroyer ORP Błyskawica for scuttling gunfire, reflecting shared postwar disposal responsibilities. Maintenance prior to towing relied on 400–500 Royal Navy personnel, augmented by 1,200 German prisoners of war for routine upkeep, while sinking methods prioritized gunfire from escorts over planned demolition charges (effective in only two instances), torpedoes from HMS Tantivy (seven submarines), and limited aerial attacks by RAF and Fleet Air Arm aircraft (13 submarines), due to weather constraints on explosive placement.[14][16] Fuel and explosive resources were allocated conservatively, with demolition charges proving largely ineffective amid rough seas, shifting reliance to onboard ammunition from escort vessels and thereby conserving specialized munitions. No comprehensive figures for fuel consumption exist in operational records, but the operation's phased execution—from Loch Ryan (27 November to 30 December 1945) and Lisahally (29 December 1945 to 12 February 1946)—minimized prolonged exposure of surface ships to Atlantic gales, optimizing limited postwar naval availability.[16]Criteria for U-boat Inclusion and Exclusion
The criteria for including U-boats in Operation Deadlight were established primarily through the Potsdam Agreement of 2 August 1945, which directed the Tripartite Naval Commission (comprising representatives from the UK, USA, and USSR) to allocate 10 U-boats to each major Allied power for technical assessment and experimentation, with the remainder—116 out of 156 surrendered vessels—to be scuttled to eliminate potential future threats.[17][18] These included U-boats concentrated at Lisahally in Northern Ireland and Loch Ryan in Scotland, provided they could be towed to the designated sinking area northwest of Ireland; seaworthiness was not strictly required, as many were sunk via towing and deliberate damage despite poor condition.[16] The commission finalized selections by 29 October 1945, prioritizing disposal of standard types like Type VIIC (73 scuttled) to prevent reactivation, while excluding advanced designs for study.[16][8] Exclusion criteria focused on vessels of high technological value or logistical impracticality. The 30 allocated U-boats (10 per power) encompassed innovative types such as Type XXI (4 scuttled, but others retained), Type XXIII (18 scuttled, some retained), and snorkel-equipped or Walter hydrogen peroxide propulsion models (e.g., U-1407 retained by the UK and commissioned as HMS Meteorite for trials until 1949).[19][8] Additional exclusions comprised approximately 10 unseaworthy U-boats left in European ports (7 in Norway, 1 in France, 2 in Germany), 9 surrendered in distant locations like Canada, the USA, or Argentina, and one returned to the Dutch Navy (UD-5, recommissioned as O-27).[16][8] Some later served as prizes to minor Allies, such as U-995 to Norway (preserved as a museum ship) and U-510 to France (renamed Bouan and decommissioned in 1959), overriding initial scuttling directives due to national claims.[8][19]| Exclusion Category | Approximate Number | Primary Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Allocated to UK/USA/USSR | 30 (10 each) | Technical evaluation of advanced features like electro-boat designs and propulsion innovations[17] |
| Unseaworthy in peripheral ports | 10 | Logistical inability to transfer for scuttling[16] |
| Surrendered outside UK control | 9 | Remote locations preventing inclusion in main concentrations[16] |
| Transferred as prizes | Variable (e.g., 1 to Netherlands, others to Norway/France) | Post-allocation claims by minor Allies for training or preservation[19][8] |
Execution of the Operation
Timeline and Phased Implementation
Operation Deadlight commenced with the issuance of formal orders on 14 November 1945, though active scuttling began on 27 November 1945 and concluded on 12 February 1946, spanning approximately three months during the winter season in the North Atlantic.[14][16] The operation involved towing 116 surrendered German U-boats, unmanned, from their holding bases at Loch Ryan in Scotland (86 boats) and Lisahally in Northern Ireland (30 boats) to designated scuttling areas approximately 100 to 180 miles northwest of Ireland, near positions such as 56° N, 10° 05' W.[2][16] Towing was conducted by Royal Navy surface vessels, with scuttling primarily executed via gunfire from escort ships, supplemented by demolition charges, submarine torpedoes, or aerial bombs where feasible; however, severe winter gales frequently caused boats to founder en route or delayed sinkings, rendering planned explosive methods impractical in most cases.[16][2] The operation unfolded in three distinct phases, organized by the origin of the U-boats and logistical constraints. Phase One, from 27 November to 30 December 1945, targeted the 86 U-boats at Loch Ryan, with towing convoys departing in batches to the scuttling grounds northwest of Lough Foyle.[16] This phase saw the highest volume of sinkings, including clusters on dates such as 30 November (six boats), 8 December (six boats), 13 December (six boats), 16 December (six boats), and 17 December (six boats), though adverse weather led to numerous premature losses at sea before reaching the target area.[6] By the end of December, all Loch Ryan boats had been disposed of, accounting for the bulk of the operation's activity.[16] Phase Two, overlapping slightly with the first, ran from 29 December 1945 to 9 January 1946 and addressed 28 U-boats from Lisahally, towed under similar arrangements to the same general vicinity.[16] Sinkings during this period included seven boats on 31 December 1945 and smaller numbers in early January, such as one each on 2 and 3 January, with continued reliance on gunfire due to persistent rough seas that prevented consistent use of underwater demolition teams.[6][16] Phase Three consisted of the final two U-boats from Lisahally, U-975 and U-3514, delayed by deliberations over potential allocations for testing or prizes; they were towed out and scuttled by gunfire on 10 February and 12 February 1946, respectively, marking the operation's conclusion at 10:04 hours on the latter date.[16][2] Throughout all phases, meteorological conditions—gales, high seas, and poor visibility—necessitated adaptive measures, such as abandoning tows for unstable boats and verifying sinkings via patrols, ensuring the systematic elimination of the fleet despite environmental impediments.[16]Methods Employed for Scuttling
The U-boats selected for Operation Deadlight were towed in groups from bases at Loch Ryan and Lisahally to designated scuttling areas approximately 120-130 miles northwest of Lough Foyle, off the coasts of Northern Ireland and Scotland, where depths exceeded 200 meters to ensure permanent disposal.[16] The operation's planners intended demolition charges as the primary method, with teams boarding the unmanned submarines to place explosives internally, targeting hull integrity for rapid flooding and sinking; supplementary techniques included aerial attacks by RAF and Fleet Air Arm aircraft on up to 36 vessels using rockets and cannon fire, and torpedo strikes from Royal Navy submarines on about 30 others, with gunfire reserved for contingencies.[16] However, persistent winter gales from November 1945 to February 1946 disrupted these plans, rendering most U-boats unseaworthy during transit and limiting controlled sinkings.[3] In practice, only two U-boats were sunk via demolition charges, as severe weather often prevented safe access for explosive placement or towing to the exact coordinates.[3] Aircraft successfully targeted 13 U-boats when conditions permitted, employing strafing runs with cannons and unguided rockets to puncture hulls and ignite fuel residues, accelerating foundering.[16] Royal Navy submarines torpedoed seven vessels, firing standard warheads at close range to breach pressure hulls and cause catastrophic implosions on descent.[3] The most prevalent outcome—approximately 58 U-boats, or nearly 50% of the total—occurred when vessels foundered under tow, succumbing to heavy seas that exploited their deteriorated condition from wartime service, incomplete maintenance, and deliberate pre-tow measures like opening sea valves or removing non-essential fittings to hasten sinking.[3] For the remaining roughly 36 submarines that reached the areas intact, Royal Navy surface ships, primarily destroyers and frigates, employed naval gunfire with 4.7-inch and 4-inch guns, concentrating salvos on conning towers and hulls until breaches induced flooding; this method proved reliable in rough conditions but required multiple vessels for efficiency.[16]| Method | Number of U-boats | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Demolition charges | 2 | Internal explosives placed by boarding parties to rupture hulls.[3] |
| Aircraft attacks | 13 | Rockets and cannon fire from RAF/Fleet Air Arm planes.[16] |
| Submarine torpedoes | 7 | Torpedo strikes from RN submarines.[3] |
| Foundered under tow | ~58 | Sinking during transit due to weather and pre-damage.[3] |
| Naval gunfire | ~36 | Shelling by surface warships.[16] |
Operational Challenges and Adaptations
The towing phase of Operation Deadlight encountered substantial difficulties owing to the poor state of the surrendered U-boats, which had been left unmaintained and moored in exposed locations for months following Germany's capitulation on 8 May 1945. Many vessels suffered structural weaknesses, including hull damage and mechanical failures, rendering them unstable and prone to foundering during transit from bases such as Lisahally and Loch Ryan to the designated scuttling grounds approximately 100 miles northwest of Ireland. Tow lines frequently parted under strain, and at least several U-boats sank prematurely en route, complicating logistical schedules and requiring salvage attempts or immediate alternative disposal.[16][3] Winter weather conditions exacerbated these issues, with frequent gales, high seas, and poor visibility from November 1945 onward delaying convoys and hindering on-site preparations. Operations, which commenced on 27 November 1945, were intermittently halted, extending the overall timeline into February 1946; for instance, specific U-boats such as U-3035, U-3041, and U-3515 faced prolonged postponements due to combined weather disruptions and towing defects. Rigging scuttling charges proved hazardous in rough conditions, risking crew safety and incomplete explosive placements.[8][20][21] To address these challenges, Royal Navy forces adapted by conducting tows in smaller, more manageable groups—typically six U-boats per convoy—escorted by destroyers and frigates equipped for rapid intervention, such as depth charge deployment against partially submerged vessels. Sinking protocols were flexibly modified: primary reliance on internal demolition charges was supplemented with gunfire from escort ships (e.g., 4.7-inch guns) and torpedoes when charges failed or weather prevented precise positioning; in cases where U-boats resurfaced due to incomplete flooding or air pockets, Royal Air Force Coastal Command aircraft were called upon to deliver 500-pound bombs for final submersion, ensuring no operational threats persisted. These measures, while extending the operation's duration, successfully disposed of 116 U-boats despite the constraints.[16][1][5]Excluded U-boats
Types and Numbers Withheld
Of the 156 German U-boats surrendered to the Allies at the end of World War II in Europe, 116 were designated for scuttling under Operation Deadlight, leaving approximately 40 excluded for retention by various Allied nations. These withholdings prioritized advanced designs for technical evaluation, propulsion trials, and potential adaptation into Allied submarine programs, as determined by the Tripartite Naval Commission (TNC) and individual Allied priorities. Conventional Type VIIC boats formed the bulk of exclusions alongside select Type XXI electro-boats, Type XXIII coastal submarines, Type XVIIB hydrogen peroxide-propelled vessels, and Type IXC/40 long-range cruisers, reflecting a strategic interest in innovative features like schnorchel systems, improved batteries, and high-test peroxide (HTP) engines rather than mass obsolescence of standard models.[14][8] Allocations were formalized with 10 U-boats each to the United Kingdom, United States, and Soviet Union, supplemented by transfers to France, Norway, and one purchase by Spain. The United Kingdom received a diverse set emphasizing experimental types: two Type XXI (U-2518 and U-3017), two Type XXIII (U-2326 and U-2348), one Type XVIIB (U-1407, tested as HMS Meteorite for HTP propulsion), four Type VIIC (U-712, U-953, U-1108, U-1171 for acoustic trials), and one Type IXC/40 (U-190, loaned to Canada). The United States obtained 10, including Type XXI examples (e.g., U-2513, U-3008), Type XVIIB (U-1406), and Type IXC, primarily for structural and detection studies until scrapping or sinking by 1956. The Soviet Union received 10, featuring Type XXI and Type VIIC boats (e.g., U-1231, U-1057), which entered operational service into the 1950s and 1970s, some expended in nuclear tests.[14][8] France acquired two Type XXI and Type XXIII via UK loans (U-2518 and U-2326), plus one retained Type IXC (U-510, recommissioned as Bouan), while Norway retained four Type VIIC and Type XXIII for service until the 1960s, including U-995 as KNM Kaura. Spain purchased one Type VIIC (U-573 as G-7) for use until 1970. These exclusions totaled around 7-10 Type XXI, 3-5 Type XXIII, 2 Type XVIIB, 15-20 Type VIIC, and 3-5 Type IXC across recipients, enabling post-war insights into German advancements but ultimately leading to most being scrapped or sunk by the early 1950s due to obsolescence and maintenance costs.[8]| Type | Approximate Number Withheld | Primary Recipients and Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| XXI (Electro-boat) | 7-10 | UK (2), US (2+), USSR (2+), France (1); submerged endurance and battery trials |
| XXIII (Coastal) | 3-5 | UK (2), Norway (1+); maneuverability and small-vessel tactics evaluation |
| XVIIB (HTP) | 2 | UK (1), US (1); alternative propulsion experiments |
| VIIC (Standard) | 15-20 | UK (4), US (several), USSR (several), Norway (3+), Spain (1); training, noise reduction studies |
| IXC/40 (Cruiser) | 3-5 | UK (1), US (1+), France (1); long-range capabilities assessment |
Specific Fates and Allocations
Of the 156 German U-boats that surrendered to the Allies in May 1945, 40 were excluded from Operation Deadlight, primarily for technical evaluation, reparations, or other post-war uses as stipulated by the Potsdam Agreement and subsequent Tripartite Naval Commission decisions finalized in January 1946.[12] These exclusions included 30 boats allocated equally among the UK, USA, and USSR (10 each) for assessment of advanced technologies such as snorkels, hydrogen peroxide propulsion, and electro-boat designs.[12] Additional boats were assigned to Norway and France, with some used for training, loaned internationally, or scrapped locally.[22] United Kingdom Allocations: The UK received 10 U-boats, including four Type VIIC (U-712, U-953, U-1108, U-1171), two Type XXI (U-2518, U-3017), two Type XXIII (U-2326, U-2348), one Type IXC/40 (U-190), and one Type XVIIB (U-1407).[14] U-1407 was refitted with a hydrogen peroxide turbine and commissioned as HMS Meteorite in August 1947 for propulsion trials, which continued until 1949 before it was scrapped.[14] U-190 was loaned to the Royal Canadian Navy for evaluation and sunk as a target on 21 October 1947 off Halifax.[22] U-2518 and U-2326 were loaned to France in February 1946; most others, including U-712 and U-953, underwent noise and detection trials before being scrapped by the British Iron and Steel Corporation between 1949 and 1950.[14] United States Allocations: The USA obtained 11 U-boats (10 direct plus one from UK stocks), such as Type XB U-234, Type IXC/40 U-530, and Type VIIC U-805.[12] U-234, notable for transporting uranium oxide and Me-262 components, was used for explosive and torpedo trials before being sunk by USS Corpulent on 20 November 1947 off Cape Cod.[22] U-805 sank during gunnery trials on 8 February 1946 after flooding.[12] Others, like U-873, were evaluated for defects (e.g., battery issues) and scrapped in 1948.[22] Soviet Union Allocations: Ten U-boats, transferred via Operation Cabal starting 24 November 1945, included Type VIIC U-1057 and U-1058.[12] These were employed for trials or as stationary hulks in the Black Sea before being scrapped, with U-1057 dismantled in 1957.[22] Norwegian and French Allocations: Norway received four Type VIIC boats (U-310, U-315, U-926, U-995), three of which were scrapped in 1947 while U-995 was repaired, commissioned into the Royal Norwegian Navy as KNM Ulstein (later KN M Knudtzon), decommissioned in 1964, and preserved as a museum ship in Laboe, Germany, since 1971.[22] France acquired one Type IXC/40 (U-510, as Bouan, scrapped 1960) and loans including U-2518, which was overhauled and commissioned as Roland Morillot in the French Navy on 20 March 1948 for training until decommissioning in 1959 and scrapping in 1966.[22][14] Other excluded boats met varied ends: seven surrendered in the Far East (e.g., Type XB U-181) were scuttled locally, such as U-181 on 15 February 1946; two were sunk during US trials; and one (UD-5) was returned to the Netherlands, recommissioned as HNLMS O 27, and scrapped in 1961.[22]| Recipient | Number Allocated | Notable Examples | Primary Uses and Fates |
|---|---|---|---|
| UK | 10 | U-1407 (HMS Meteorite), U-190 | Propulsion trials; loaned (to Canada/France); scrapped 1947–1950 |
| USA | 11 | U-234, U-805 | Explosive/torpedo tests; sunk in trials 1946–1947; scrapped 1948 |
| USSR | 10 | U-1057, U-1058 | Evaluation as hulks; scrapped by 1957 |
| Norway | 4 | U-995 | Repaired/commissioned; U-995 preserved as museum since 1971; others scrapped 1947 |
| France | 2 (1 direct +1 loan) | U-510 (Bouan), U-2518 (Roland Morillot) | Training; scrapped 1960–1966 |
Aftermath and Immediate Impacts
Sinking Outcomes and Verification
Of the 116 German U-boats allocated for disposal in Operation Deadlight, all were successfully sunk between November 1945 and February 1946, primarily through scuttling but supplemented by alternative methods when initial efforts failed due to adverse weather or structural resilience.[6] The operation's records indicate no permanent failures, with any floating vessels promptly targeted to ensure submersion.[6] Sinkings were executed in phases off the northern Irish coast, with escorts towing boats to designated positions before crews opened sea valves or placed demolition charges; rough Atlantic conditions often caused delays or incomplete flooding, necessitating gunfire from destroyers (28 cases), torpedoes from British submarines (2 cases), aerial attacks (7 cases), or incidental foundering during transit (5 cases).[6] The breakdown of final sinking causes is as follows:| Method | Number of U-boats |
|---|---|
| Scuttling or unknown | 62 |
| Naval gunfire | 28 |
| Torpedoes | 2 |
| Aircraft attacks | 7 |
| Foundered in tow | 5 |
| Total | 116 |