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British and Norwegians Conduct Operation Claymore Against German Targets in Norway 4 March 1941On 4 March 1941, 500 troops of the British 3 and 4 Commando units with the company of 50 Norwegian sailors landed on the Lofoten Islands off the coast of northwestern Norway to destroy fish oil (used in German ammunition) refining factories and boats. The raid was a rousing success and almost captured a German enigma machine, until the German captain of the trawler Krebs threw his machine overboard. The raid did yield a couple of extra enigma rotors which helped in the longer term struggle to break the German codes. Motorcycle Ride RecommendationI've been to Narvik and northwards on the E-6 and eastwards on the E-10, but I have not travelled to the Lofoten Islands. If the roads there are the same as the rest of Norway, you'll be smiling. Book Recommendation: Enigma: The Battle for the Code from AbeBooks.co.uk or Amazon.co.ukMap Recommendation: Norway North Road Map: Narvik No. 3 from AbeBooks.co.uk Technorati Tags: 1900s 1940s 1941 4 4th Commandos March Narvik NO-E-10 NO-E-6 Raid World War 2 World War II WW2 WWII motorcycle motorcycle-touring motorcycle touring military history military-history battlefieldsBy BB at 5 Mar 2007 - 10:42 | 1900s | 1940s | 1941 | 4 | 4th | Commandos | March | Narvik | NO-E-10 | NO-E-6 | Raid | World War 2 | World War II | WW2 | WWII | BB's blog | add new comment
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The Common SoldierShout long and loud --Anonymous User loginLinks We Like
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Brits Violate Norway's Neutrality
If I have read correctly, some lefties have claimed that the operation you refer to above was a violation of Norwegian neutrality and that the Brits were at fault because they technically violated Norwegian territory first. Maybe looking back we will find that Churchill understood the Bush doctrine of preemptive warfare pretty well and that leftist critics of Bush's doctrine today will be just as discredited as Churchill's critics were then. RealRedFox