| An Island at war does not merely fight for territory; it fights for time at sea. In the Second World War, the Battle of the Atlantic became a running test of whether Britain and its allies could keep goods moving across thousands of miles of ocean while an adaptive submarine campaign sought to turn every crossing into delay, dispersal, and loss. The outcome hinged less on any single weapon than on the ability to manage flows, allocate scarce protection, and make decisions fast enough to matter. The Battle of the Atlantic: Convoys, codebreaking, and the fight to feed an island war reframes the campaign through naval logistics and the practical logic of the convoy system. Rafael Conti shows how convoy assembly, escort doctrine, basing, and air cover interacted with the enemy’s search-and-concentrate methods. He follows the problem from ports and routeing desks to the shifting geometry of mid-ocean battles, explaining why “more escorts” was never a complete answer, and why small coordination failures could erase hard-won advantages. Throughout, the book treats intelligence realistically: signals intelligence reduced uncertainty, but only when institutions could translate perishable insight into timely routing, reinforcement, and action at sea. Written for general readers, students, and analysts, this is a guide to understanding maritime war as systems management under risk and uncertainty. Readers will come away with a clearer sense of what decided survival in the Atlantic: not a single turning point, but the cumulative alignment of organisation, information, reach, and production that kept the pipeline open when it mattered most. |
The Battle of the Atlantic: Convoys, Codebreaking, and the Fight to Feed an Isla
Hardback | 9789377949709 | 326pp
Paperback | 9789377948610 | 326ppRafael Conti

















