Germany's navy, the Kriegsmarine, played a critical role in the Third
Reich's attempt to restrict the flow of supplies, men and materiel from
the United States to Britain in the early years of the war and from
North America and Britain to the Soviet Union from 1941. Such was the
success of the U-boats in particular, by the end of the war more than
3000 Allied ships with a combined gross tonnage 14.5 million had been
sent to the bottom of the sea. The Kriegsmarine examines the workings
of the German Navy through its organization, command structure, economic
resources, production figures, recruitment, training and philosophy.
Broken down by key campaigns and subject areas, the book includes
exhaustive reference tables, diagrams, maps and charts, presenting all
the core data in easy-to-follow formats. The Kriegsmarine is an
essential reference guide for anyone interested in the history and
structure of Germany's wartime navy.