Operation Zarin
Operation Zarin was a German minelaying operation off the north-western coast of the islands of Novaya Zemlya in the Arctic Ocean. The operation was conducted between 24 September and 28 September 1942 by the German heavy cruiser escorted by the destroyers,, and, because the British had sunk the specialist minelayer on 25 August. The mines laid during the operation had little effect.
Background
Operation Tsar ()
During Convoy PQ 17 freighters sailed as far north as possible and used the coasts of Novaya Zemlya as cover to get to Murmansk or Arkhangelsk. In Operation Tsar the minelayer was sent from Kiel to Narvik escorted by the destroyer and the torpedo boats and from 15 to 19 August. Ulm was to lay a minefield off Cape Zhelaniya, the most northerly point of Novaya Zemlya, after the completion of Operation Wonderland. The minefield would force Allied ships to steer more to the south and bring them into the range of the German bomber aircraft stationed in Norway. The sortie by Ulm was uncovered by the British Enigma machine code-breakers of the Government Code and Cypher School on 25 August. Mines were to be laid by U-boats as part of Unternehmen Zar off the narrow Matochkin Strait between Severny Island and Yuzhny Island of Novaya Zemlya in Operation Peter by U-589. In Operation Paul U-591 was to mine the Yugorsky Strait, the sound between the Kara Sea and the Pechora Sea.Sinking of ''Ulm''
The US heavy cruiser, with two US and three British destroyer escorts, had delivered the ground crews and equipment for Operation Orator, then sailed from the Soviet Union on 24 August and after picking up survivors from Convoy PQ 17 were in the Barents Sea. The Admiralty ordered the commander of to detach from Tuscaloosa with and and steer south-east of Bear Island, later altered to south towards the North Cape. Selby was told that light warships were thought to be in the area. At a ship was sighted and the destroyers accelerated to, the ship turned to port until sailing away from the destroyers; six minutes afterwards, Onslaught began to fire at, Marne following suit. Ulm turned west, then to the south-west, beginning to zigzag.Kapitänleutnant der Reserve Ernst Biet, the German captain, ordered fire to be opened with the 105 mm gun. Marne and Martin straddled Ulm with shells and Ulm hit Marne on Y gun, killing a member of the crew and three of the survivors from PQ 17, wounding five more. By the range had reduced to and the anti-aircraft guns of the destroyers were used to fire at the bridge of the German ship, to hit the wireless room and any fire-control apparatus. The automatic fire caused many casualties as much of the crew had gathered there, ready to abandon ship. Onslaught was endangered by the fall of shot from Marne and increased speed to to get out of the way. Onslaught missed with two torpedoes but hit Ulm near the foremast at setting off a big explosion and detonating ammunition, breaking Ulm in two, the halves sinking quickly at Marne rescued 54 survivors but abandoned 30 to 40 men to die, apparently due to the presence of German aircraft; 132 men were killed. The loss of Ulm greatly diminished the German ability to lay large quantities of mines in the Arctic.