During the Summer of 1942 Britain and America jointly agreed to supply
desperately needed arms to Soviet Russia. The Germans were as determined
to halt this potentially war-winning operation as the Allies were that
it should succeed. The battleground could not have been more
inhospitable than the appalling conditions of the Arctic sea. The
British and American merchantmen and their gallant naval escorts
suffered grievous losses. The cold was so intense that there were
pitifully few survivors from the many vessels sunk in the running
battles that raged. The book deals in detail with the fate of the
convoys PQ13 and PQ 17, bound from Iceland to North Russia, and the
Westbound convoy QP13. Attacked by aircraft and U-boats, PQ13 and PQ17
lost between them a total of thirty ships while QP13, untouched by the
enemy, ran into a British minefield off Iceland with the loss of seven
ships.