Action off La Ciotat
The Action off La Ciotat was a naval engagement in August 1944 during the Second World War as part of Operation Dragoon. Allied forces, engaged at the main landings in Vichy France, ordered a small flotilla of American and British warships to make a feint against the port city of La Ciotat. The Allies hoped to draw German forces away from the main landing zones at Cavalaire-sur-Mer, Saint-Tropez and Saint Raphaël. During the operation, two German warships attacked the Allied flotilla.
Background
Before dawn on 15 August, a deception operation was undertaken by the Special Operations Group preparatory to the landings of Operation Dragoon. The Western and Eastern Diversionary units, two groups of ships and smaller vessels simulated landings on the flanks of the true invasion beaches in the area of Nice and Cannes and in the Bay of La Ciotat. The boats towed captive balloons with radar reflectors to make the force appear to be convoys twelve miles long and eight miles wide on those German radars that remained operational.Aircraft above dropped window; another force feinted towards Genoa. led vessels towards La Ciotat as the British s and bombarded shore targets near Antibes. The stratagem at La Ciotat included a decoy landing by 216 Squadron RAF that sent five Dakotas to drop window and use Mandrel jammers against German Freya and Würzburg radars, to appear to be a larger force, then dropped dummy paratroops and pyrotechnics to sound like small-arms fire.
Prelude
Allied bombardment
On 17 August 1944, Captain John D. Bulkeley proceeded to La Ciotat with a force comprising the destroyer, Endicott, 17 PT boats and the British gunboats Scarab and Aphis. The force was to perform another ruse to convince the Germans that the Allies were going to make a supporting landing along the Bay of La Ciotat. At the ships began to bombard the coast and PT boats simulated a large Allied naval force manoeuvring offshore.''Kriegsmarine''
The former Italian, renamed UJ6082 and the former Egyptian armed yacht Nimet Allah. UJ6082 was armed with one gun, seven 20 mm cannon and two torpedo tubes. Her sister ship UJ6081 had been sunk two days earlier at the Battle of Port Cros. Nimet Allah mounted only a German anti-aircraft Flak gun.Action
In the early morning of 17 August, at about the weather was good with a slight swell and a moon. The two British gunboats engaged the Germans with their 6-inch and 12-pounder guns but the enemy fire was so accurate that they were forced to withdraw. Endicott; the breech blocks on the other three guns had overheated and jammed, leaving one 5-inch gun serviceable. Endicott opened fire on UJ6073 with the gun that was still operational but slower than usual at one shell per minute as the rammer had broken, leaving the crew to load by hand and close the breach with sledge hammers. The third and fourth shells from Endicott hit UJ6073 in the engine room and left it drifting. UJ6073 sank at Endicott suffering one German shell hit that caused minor flooding.At UJ6082 fired two torpedoes at Endicott that took evasive action, then replied with two torpedoes. As UJ6082 evaded the American torpedoes the US destroyer closed to within of UJ6082 and swept its decks with its 40 mm anti-aircraft guns. Endicott closed the range to as UJ6082 returned fire until another hit by a 5-inch shell near the funnel and bridge. and the crew of UJ6082 began to abandon the ship at UJ6082 capsizing at